Re: I did it again! Page 2
a couple of things that may help:
when you're shooting primer, or any other coat for that matter, you gotta get even coverage before moving on. in the primer pix you've posted on that page, you can see a lot of unprimed surface. the piece should be completely covered before you move on. keep in mind that i'm just going off of the pictures you posted, and am assuming that's how it looked when you started shooting color.
from the pix, i'd say you're shooting heavy coats if you're getting drips like that. if the book recommends going from one side of the body to another in 1-1.5 seconds, i'd count it out as you spray, just until you get into the habit. as far as the drips you've got now, you may be able to sand it all flat, but i'd think it's gonna take a while before the surface dries enough to sand it.
any chance you can shoot in a garage? i think you'd see massive improvement by doing that. with the wind blowing, i can imagine you've gotta get really close with the spray can, and it's a lot harder to spray an even coat outside.
one thing i did in my garage was to run clear vynl tarps from ceiling to floor to keep everything that i *don't* want to paint from becoming covered in overspray.
sully
a couple of things that may help:
when you're shooting primer, or any other coat for that matter, you gotta get even coverage before moving on. in the primer pix you've posted on that page, you can see a lot of unprimed surface. the piece should be completely covered before you move on. keep in mind that i'm just going off of the pictures you posted, and am assuming that's how it looked when you started shooting color.
from the pix, i'd say you're shooting heavy coats if you're getting drips like that. if the book recommends going from one side of the body to another in 1-1.5 seconds, i'd count it out as you spray, just until you get into the habit. as far as the drips you've got now, you may be able to sand it all flat, but i'd think it's gonna take a while before the surface dries enough to sand it.
any chance you can shoot in a garage? i think you'd see massive improvement by doing that. with the wind blowing, i can imagine you've gotta get really close with the spray can, and it's a lot harder to spray an even coat outside.
one thing i did in my garage was to run clear vynl tarps from ceiling to floor to keep everything that i *don't* want to paint from becoming covered in overspray.
sully
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