Wow a RU-vid instructional video that I felt zero urge to fast forward through any of.🥇 A+. Rare. Y'all better recognize. This is the definition of concise. 👌
Bravo! The biggest thing I learned early on was: Racking of your part is extremely important! Know how you're going to rack a part and make sure you can get it in/out of the oven before you even start .... and furhter, I will rack the part (especially the hanging parts like your horn ring) and hold the oven rack in a vice and spray it while it is hanging from the rack, so that I don't have to risk bumping it while transferring it to the rack and into the oven.
Wear some harbor freight nitrile gloves working with Acetone. My skin eventually developped a sensitivity to solvents...and it dries your skin out really bad...fantastic video.
I got acetone in my eyeballs once. Was doing wet industrial paint looking up. Dropped right between the area of my brow ridge and safety glasses. The minute it touched those glasses they become cloudy and the minute it got into my eye I was like a bat out of hell looking for water.
Looks great. Be careful when working with metallics, particularly anything with iridescent sparkle - you can easily overbake it and kill the color (have made this mistake many times). That's why I always undercure the color and then bake the clear coat at the lowest possible temp for longer. Columbia Coatings makes a low-temp clear coat that you can bake at 325 deg for like 15-20mins vs 400 deg for 10. Have had much better results using that as a clear coat for those kind of colors.
To anyone watching this video and the person that made this video . Please wear correct gloves when handling acetone it enters the bloodstream through the nail cuticles and repeated exposure has been known to cause liver damage and liver cancer .
That goes for most chemicals. I learned in my apprenticeship that most chemicals have a 99% absorption rate into the skin. Gloves are inexpensive and replaceable.
Awesome! the black metallic on that water bottle reminds me of the paint on the 2014 Dodge Challenger my dad used to have, I think they called it Phantom Black Metallic. So slick!
Yes you can! You need low pressure and they can easily maintain that! Your gun will specify the exact settings for that, but I used about 8-10 psi out of a 2.5 gallon for quite a while!