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This article by Bob Wark of "THE WARK SHOP" Motorcycle Painting, Marietta, Ohio. Bob can be reached by calling (740) 374-4250, 8:00AM - 8:00PM EST If you have been following this series you know our parts have had their
final '600' grit sanding and are ready for the 'Gun'. First, the spray booth is given a good cleaning. Special attention is given to the incoming air filters. All air entering the booth is filtered to assure a minimum of air borne contaminants. The parts, which are on jigs, are evenly spaced to give me lots of safe movement. This spacing is critical as I wear a supplied air mask while painting. The combination of wearing this space suit and dragging around the related hoses is a bit ponderous, but this system allows me to breath air drawn from outside of the booth so it is very important to my health! Next, I put on my freshly washed nylon painting suit. All parts are now
washed with 'wax and grease remover' to assure there is no surface
contamination... one sweaty finger print can ruin a job! The exhaust fan is of
course running during this work to carry away the fumes and generally clear the
booth air. The floor of the booth is lightly watered and the jig bases get a
good soaking. This maneuver serves 2 purposes. First this large wet surface (the
Floor) will attract airborne undesirables, including flying insects so this will
help deep them off the parts. Secondly, static will attract dust to your parts,
and we don't want that! All parts are now lightly sprayed with an anti static
material. As an example, I will be painting a standard 2-stage color, meaning one
stage is the base color and one stage is the clear. If the base color is
somewhat transparent and poor hiding, I will have tinted the primer to help
coverage. During all this shooting and waiting, the floor continues to be wet down
(very carefully), as we don't need water splashed on the work! Many good painters will match or often exceed factory quality. You should
expect a good job, BUT ... that perfect show winning paint job is a horse of a
different color! Adios Amigos! Painter Bob "The Wark Shop" Carpe Diem |
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