Need help quick!

01svtL

New member
I am in the process of painting my mirrors body color. I had the side of the car covered. When I went to spray the mirror, there must have been somethin in the nozzle, b/c it sprayed everywhere. I now have little specs of paint all over my hood and fender. What can I use to get them off without removing the factory paint? There is a thin coat of wax (hopefully still there) there, so hopefully that should create some kind of barrier from drying for good?
 
01svtL said:
I am in the process of painting my mirrors body color. I had the side of the car covered. When I went to spray the mirror, there must have been somethin in the nozzle, b/c it sprayed everywhere. I now have little specs of paint all over my hood and fender. What can I use to get them off without removing the factory paint? There is a thin coat of wax (hopefully still there) there, so hopefully that should create some kind of barrier from drying for good?



You won't know how well it's bonded until you try something.



I'd probably try clay, then a paint cleaner, then some abrasive polish, then a compound, then wetsanding (in that order). Or you could try lacquer thinner. Not sure if Mineral Spirits would work or not.
 
Btw, what is the correct sequence: paint, clear, wet sand then polish; or paint, wet sand, clear, wet sand, polish?
 
01svtL said:
Btw, what is the correct sequence: paint, clear, wet sand then polish; or paint, wet sand, clear, wet sand, polish?



Better ask a painter to be sure, but AFAIK if you do the prep right there's no sanding between the basecoat and the clear. IF you prep before/after the primer properly, then any (presumbly fine, like ~320 grit or finer) residual prep issues/scratches oughta get filled in by the basecoat and then the clear.



But then I don't consider wetsanding to be at *all* mandatory. The paint's texture oughta match without needing to do that, at least in most cases. The idea is to match the factory orangepeel (unless you're doing a full repaint to better-than-oem standards).
 
What is a good pad/polish combo to use after wet-sanding. I had to sand in a few spots, and still didn't get everything out. I'm afraid I'm going to have to live with a few specs on my hood and fender for now. Luckily the paint is a perfect match, so they can only bee seen in certain lights/angles, but it still bothers the hell out of me.
 
01svtL said:
What is a good pad/polish combo to use after wet-sanding. I had to sand in a few spots, and still didn't get everything out. I'm afraid I'm going to have to live with a few specs on my hood and fender for now. Luckily the paint is a perfect match, so they can only bee seen in certain lights/angles, but it still bothers the hell out of me.



Depends what grit the marks are from and what kind of polisher you're using, but generally a 4" cutting pad of some kind and M105/Ultimate Compound should do it (that combo will take it down to bare metal if you spend enough time on it ;) ). I've taken out 2K scratches with PC/4" orange (PFW worked too)/M105, on very hard clear, so it can be done. Sure did take a long time though.
 
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