- May 13, 2009
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Im a total noob. Im gonna do it anyways since I have an old Mustang and the paint couldn't get any worse. Figure I'd do it myself. Any fall backs or things im not seeing as a complete noob that I should worry about?
If you're not ultra OCD like myself, I don't see why you can't just get some sand paper and bucket of paint for Home Depot and go to town on your car. You'll have an awesome bumpy matte look to your car.
For things like front fenders of motorcycles, splash guards, touch up sections, wheels, do-it-yourself paint jobs seem to do ok.
I have seen very VERY few good home paintjobs for entire cars. It's not that difficult to paint a bike, but a car has huge flat spaces where imperfections and issues show easily.
It helps if you have a paint booth. Where do you plan on doing all the painting? If you do it in a garage you're going to have primer, paint, and clear all over everything in the garage.
It helps if you have a paint booth. Where do you plan on doing all the painting? If you do it in a garage you're going to have primer, paint, and clear all over everything in the garage.
You hang plastic from the walls and cover the floor when you spray. Let the paint dry for a day, than back out the car and pull down the plastic. The one car I painted came out just about perfect.
I'd never do it again though. It's easier to do all the prep work and have a body shop shoot the color and bake it.
A friend of mine in college redid the hood on his car with OE paint in a rattle can with fantastic results. He did really good prep and a bit of wet sanding to make it all pretty in the end.
A friend of mine in college redid the hood on his car with OE paint in a rattle can with fantastic results. He did really good prep and a bit of wet sanding to make it all pretty in the end.
Wow look great. How many coats did that take?
Did he not want to polish the roof? It's not as glossy/reflective as the rest.