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#1
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Hi Folks,
Anyone use a colored slurry solution when you are wet sanding to finish? I see on the Polish refinish site they use some kind of blue solution that drys. Any idea what it is composed of? GL |
#2
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![]() Gregg Buy a can of lacquer paint, any dark colour will do. Hold the can about 2 feet above the surface and spray horizontally and produce a speckled surface. used a cloth wetted with thinner and wipe, bingo you will have a nice coloured surface. http://www.wingdolly.reach.net/image2.html Udo On Jan 13, 12:40*pm, Gregg Leslie wrote: Hi Folks, Anyone use a colored slurry solution when you are wet sanding to finish? I see on the Polish refinish site they use some kind of blue solution that drys. Any idea what it is composed of? GL |
#3
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pretty much everybody uses these in some for or other
when profiling gelcoat red/black/blue 1 pack paint, put some in a jar, dilute with acetone (gives very quick drying), you will have to experement with dilution, too thin, you cant see it, too thick and it will clog the finer grits . wipe on with rag, we call it scumble locally, sand until it disapears (but do not sand untill every single dot disappears otherwise you may sand through. for each grade of abrasive you use reapply(shows up the scratches from the last cut) for small areas you can use a soft graphite pencil if you have to apply more gelcoat or fill pinholes, wipe of residual paint with acetone first otherwise it will be trapped under the gel in any case wipe down with acetone before polishing Pete At 17:42 13 January 2008, Gregg Leslie wrote: Hi Folks, Anyone use a colored slurry solution when you are wet sanding to finish? I see on the Polish refinish site they use some kind of blue solution that drys. Any idea what it is composed of? GL |
#4
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Go to the local auto paint store and buy a 3M product
called Dry Guide Coat. It is much, much easier than making some concoction that needs to be sprayed or smeared on. It has a foam applicator pad and as the name implies, it goes on dry. It holds up to water, yet comes right off with a swipe of sand paper. Really good stuff, designed for this exact application. I've tried the other methods, and found this to be far superior. Brian Bange At 21:18 13 January 2008, Peter Thomas wrote: pretty much everybody uses these in some for or other when profiling gelcoat red/black/blue 1 pack paint, put some in a jar, dilute with acetone (gives very quick drying), you will have to experement with dilution, too thin, you cant see it, too thick and it will clog the finer grits . wipe on with rag, we call it scumble locally, sand until it disapears (but do not sand untill every single dot disappears otherwise you may sand through. for each grade of abrasive you use reapply(shows up the scratches from the last cut) for small areas you can use a soft graphite pencil if you have to apply more gelcoat or fill pinholes, wipe of residual paint with acetone first otherwise it will be trapped under the gel in any case wipe down with acetone before polishing Pete At 17:42 13 January 2008, Gregg Leslie wrote: Hi Folks, Anyone use a colored slurry solution when you are wet sanding to finish? I see on the Polish refinish site they use some kind of blue solution that drys. Any idea what it is composed of? GL |
#5
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On Jan 13, 10:40 am, Gregg Leslie
wrote: Hi Folks, Anyone use a colored slurry solution when you are wet sanding to finish? I see on the Polish refinish site they use some kind of blue solution that drys. Any idea what it is composed of? GL Take a look at the jimphoenix website. Great finish / refinish info. He uses blue ink and water to dye the gelcoat he http://www.jimphoenix.com/jimphoenix...ubNimbus1.html RJL Mini Nimbus FK |
#6
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On Jan 14, 8:11 pm, wrote:
On Jan 13, 10:40 am, Gregg Leslie wrote: Hi Folks, Anyone use a colored slurry solution when you are wet sanding to finish? I see on the Polish refinish site they use some kind of blue solution that drys. Any idea what it is composed of? GL Take a look at the jimphoenix website. Great finish / refinish info. He uses blue ink and water to dye the gelcoat hehttp://www.jimphoenix.com/jimphoenix...us1/subNimbus1... RJL Mini Nimbus FK Udo's on the right track, but you don't even need to spend the time to smear it around with a thinner soaked rag. A $3.00 can of semi-flat black Krylon works great. Just mist it on to speckle the surface and wait a few minutes for it to dry and away you go. Simple and fast. Craig |
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