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Automotive PaintThere are many different types (or more correctly, technologies) of automotive paint products you can use in the restoration or repair of your vehicle. Some auto paints have a variety of uses while others are very limited with only a few of specific uses. Proper choice of auto paint products can help you get the job done faster and/or help with the longevity of the repair. Let's start with some basic definitions. I couldn't possibly know every auto paint manufactures terminology or product use. These are generalities and should be used as a guide only to then read the tech sheets of the products you have chosen for proper use. These tech sheets can be found at the jobber and are given away free. Or most manufactures have them on line, USE THEM. They are a wealth of information and can save you many headaches. You don't need to read every word in the mind numbing text, they usually have a "product at a glance" or something like that will cut to the chase and give you what you need. Basic terminology's: "Solvent" is a generic term and refers to any "reducer", "thinner" that is used to reduce the viscosity ("thickness") of a product to aid in spraying or applying. It could be acetone, lacquer thinner, urethane reducer, a special "basecoat" reducer, water, alcohol, etc. These solvents ARE NOT INTERCHANGEABLE; each product MUST be used with the specific solvent recommended by the manufacture. "Etch primer" an acid containing primer. "Primer" a product that can be applied to bare metal "Surfacer" (or "primer surfacer") A primer that has "body" or solids and is used to fill imperfections and provide a film thickness to sand or block a surface to a smooth base for paint. "Sealer" a non-sanding product that is applied prior to painting. "Primer-sealer" A sealer that can be applied over bare metal and then top coated without sanding. "Flash time" the time you allow the solvents to evaporate out of the film you have applied. Basic technologies "Single component" or RTS (Ready To Spray). This is a product that uses no additional components. Just pour it from the can into your gun and shoot. Examples are: Some plastic adhesion promoters and primers and even some top coats like vinyl colors. "1K" This is a automotive paint product that uses no hardener, catalyst, activator, etc. It may have an added solvent, but no hardener or activating reducer. 1K products like RTS dry with the evaporation of solvents and are soluble, meaning that they are could be wiped off with a rag soaked with lacquer thinner. They could in THEORY be scraped off and put in a can with solvent and stirred back to a sprayable condition. Of course ALL RTS products are 1K. Examples: All lacquer products, some synthetic enamel products, and some acrylic enamel products. Because of the low VOC regulations the 1K product options are getting scarce, with most limited to "specialty products" like adhesion promoters. "2K" or "Two component" is any auto paint product that uses a hardener, activator, catalyst, etc. It may or may not use a third component in the form of a solvent. 2K products don't "dry" like a 1K. The 2K product "cures" by molecules linking together to form a whole new compound. Most high quality 2Ks are insoluble after a full cure and will not soften when exposed to solvents like thinners or gas. Examples are urethane under coats and top coats. Epoxies, ISO free products that use a hardener, etc. Basic tip, ALL 2K automotive paint products should be mixed as accurately as possible. As a rule 2K products need a minimum of 55 degrees to cure with an ideal minimum of 65 degrees. MIX THEM AS DESCRIBED BY THE MANUFACTURE. They have spent hundreds of thousands, possibly millions of dollars developing the product, they WANT it to work as BEST it can. Do as they say, don't become a "Junior Chemist". |
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