Im about to roll paint my 48 Ford 8N tractor, thank you for the detailed process you went through and sharing, definitely boosted my confidence in the process. The old tractor is a worker not a show stopper and this will help her look just a bit nicer.
That’s awesome. I would encourage you to pressure wash that thing first and give it a good wipe down to make sure you’re not fighting any grease. also make sure that the paint is warm and that the tractor is warm for the entire process as well as for it to dry for a day or two. Good luck! I know it’ll turn out great.
Every thing you said makes sense. If they don’t fallow your direction they can not complain. I did that on a unwanted door . It came out perfect now i will do my car.
Dang Robert. Thanks for the compliment. I tried to be thorough. I'll probably do my old tractor this summer and offer a few more tips I learned that I didn't mention.
Glad it was helpful! Good luck! Please go to my channel and watch the one year follow up video because there’s a few tips that I missed in these earlier videos.
Thank You for all the information! The video was fun to watch and I like your approach to things when you do them yourself, sometimes you just need to fix things just so, no more no less, you are not restoring a classic here, you are making more appealing a vehicle that you just use every day look cleaner and put together! And sometimes that is just what is needed! Thank you again for your video!
Thank you for your comment. You fully understand. I’ve had so many people lecture me on why it was foolish not to spray or have a professional do it or many other complaints. They completely miss the point of what was done here. I hope you’ll subscribe and I hope I’ll hear from you on other videos! Thanks again!
Id recommend someone looking to try this method, paint an exterior door on your house. It's the same process, same tools, materials. And most doors could use a nice cleaning, sand fill and fill dings on there front door? Home depot even gave me a can of bondo when I complained about a dented door they delivered.
This sounds great. My daughter wants her silver Xterra to get a black roof. The low gloss black Rust-Oleum sounds perfect. May do the front hood and back hatch too, depending on how the roof looks. Get a silver/black two tone thing going.
Thank you! I recently acquired a used truck fiberglass cap and I think I'm going to roller paint it. My garage is attached to my house so spraying it isn't an option. It's to cold out side this time of year to spray paint. So I will give it try with the roller. Thank you for all the great tips!
That’s awesome! A truck topper is the perfect application. I’m positive you’ll be happy! Just make sure you’re painting and drying in a warm space. Also, watch my other 3 videos in this series and there are some good tips, especially the 2 year follow up video
I use a brush, usually, but you have encouraged me to try a roller. I have 3 tractor painting projects coming up, and my business partner has pickup trucks that need paint. I will try!
The roller is awesome! What I really suggest is thinning it out a bit and then rolling on and finishing with a brush! That’s gonna be the smoothest! The brush tips will knock down the roller texture a lot
I was feeling pretty depressed after getting an outrageous estimate from MAACO for my old Honda. Now I know what I'm gonna do! Thanks for the great info.😀
@@thejoyoffixing Damn! I got all my supplies, started some bondo and rust sanding, and just waiting for the paint to arrive. Perfect color. Just got a notice that it was returned to sender. Not available in California!! Now I have to rethink everything.🤬
@@EdKrebs-jb7voOrder it delivered to a store just across the state line and pick it up in person. Every hardware store in America carries farm/implement paint.
Thanks im gonna try this on our farm truck, that had the same delamination your Honds had. Used the rustoleum on our tractors on small places, never crossed my mind to do the truck!! THANKS again. Hope your medical issues get resolved.
I’ve started on my 2008 Honda. My question is, can this paint be wet sanded, buffed, or compounded, and how long should I wait to do it after a thick or multiple coats. Thank you very much.
I noticed you made a comment about painting a black car, with the black paint, which is exactly what I was planning on doing, so what should my reservations be? I would be ok with semigloss in place of high gloss if that is available. I would appreciate your advice. Thanks Paul
If you’re using this tractor paint, I don’t think it comes in different gloss options. It’s glossy because there’s so much enamel in it. If you need something else you’re going to end up going with maybe one of the other enamel rust oleum. You might have to do a little more research on that.
In the 90's I decided to remove basement composite floor tiles, many had some lose, and I wanted to replace with sheet vinyl flooring. I used a product called stripeez, which I no longer see available. The "glue" under the tiles was some sort of black asphalt, and couldn't scrape it off. So I put that stripeez on it, but it was flashing off too quick and was too strong without using a fan for fresh air, which just made it flash even faster. I was bummed out for awhile, then came up with an idea to try. So, put on sections with the stripeez, immediately rolled on motor oil. That did it. It kept the stripper from flashing off too quick and cut down on excess fumes. I was then able to scrape all that old asphalt (home from 60's) the tiles were set into, and finally able to install the vinyl sheet flooring. So, I wonder if similar approach would work well for stripping car paint, allowing the stripper underneath the oil cover to work better. I guess that stripeez is one of the older ones you mentioned no longer produced. There is one with similar name and I'm guessing that's what replaced the old version I had in the 90's.
Absolutely. It handled direct impact from 2 different cars and literally took almost no damage. a Wet rag to clean up scuffs left from the OTHER cars paint and it was back to the way I had it. This paint has been BEYOND the toughness I expected.
Hi. Thanks for this. How many coats did you do? How smooth was it? Can you show close up pics of the sheen? Did you sand between coats? Why not spray it on?
Almost all these questions will be answered multiple times in other comments. I’d repeat them, but I know it’s really well explained if you just scroll and read replies on the “short edit” of the actual car painting video I posted. I’ll be doing an update video in the next few weeks as well. Thanks for watching, Dan!
So i use the paint, can i wet sand or dry sand, to smooth it out, so i can compound and polish it? Please respond....because i really need to try this.....
I’ve not done either. Read the comments in this video: th-cam.com/video/Yw9O2mNKfkg/w-d-xo.htmlsi=03L3DIb00iWHsbFO Look at comments about “roll and tipping”. Thinner paint more coats.
Hey man thanks soo much for these videos, knowledge/experience- sharing, and being an inspiration to fellow DIYers. I used regular gloss white rustoleum to roll onto my 21 year old car and it held up 4-5 years before specks on the roof started flaking off. The car was never garaged, rarely ever washed, and never clear-coated. But now I'm interested in using this Tractor paint on a different vehicle for better longevity. Quick question though....you mentioned wiping down the car with BOTH rubbing alcohol and then acetone before painting. Is that really necessary, or can you just use one or the other?
the haters of rustoleum paint ,if you are too lazy to prep the car ,leave the paint in the can ,you will get out of your paint job ,what you put into it .what ever paint you use . stick to your crayons and coloring books .
@@thejoyoffixing I have. More than once. I think I'm obsessing too much. (Being clinically OCD doesn't help, lol) Anyways... I'm thinking Rust-Oleum farm paint because of the affordability and the durability. And I'm leaning towards a dark Olive green. Since they don't have that, I'll have to mix black and yellow. Just wanting to make sure I have enough to do it right. Thanks.
Dark green olive is a personal favorite. I have an old John deer gator I’m about to get working on and I’m gonna probably paint it. Black and yellow will make the olive green? No blue? I’m curious.
@@thejoyoffixing yep. I think there's a couple of methods. But the simplest is yellow and black. I'm experimenting with it now. I think a 3 part yellow and 1 part black looks pretty good. I tried a 2:1 yellow to black, but it came out a bit dark. I bought a couple of bottles of paint from Walmart for like 60 cents a piece so I could try it out. I want to do the body Olive green, and the hood and rims and grill black. I think it'll have a military look.
Good info, I'll be painting my 1998 dodge 350 van wagon come summer. I liked the video and subscribed. TKS. I am considering a textured look, got any ideas on how to do it, do they make a four inch roller that leaves a textured look?
Don't do the textured look. It'll end up uneven. Get yourself some primer and make sure to hit any areas that are down to bare metal. If you're going for a flat paint, I recommend the Rustoleum Enamel Paint applied the same way. Use the foam roller. Thanks for subscribing. I have some cool new content coming after the new year.
Awesome! Glad this helped! Again, I'll say, I recommend using primer on any areas that are bare metal. Just to make sure your bond is good! Otherwise, everything I said I stand by! Hope it goes great! Let me know!
@@thejoyoffixing interesting, where i live (reunion island) i dont have the brand rustoleum, but a local brand paint oil with antirust propertie for metal use
For context, I used 400 grit to prep my car hood that had minor sun damage, I then used primer, painted it black with a spray can, and then a clear coat but it turned out bad. Flakes everything etc. I sanded it with 400 grit and there’s clearly no clear coat now and down to the black coat. What should I do? 320 on it then paint with the Rust-Oleum tractor and implement? I have the paint but want to make sure it sticks. Like I said it’s 400 grit sanded now. Thanks for your videos and input!
I'm going to to this to my 2007 Crown Victoria that the factory paint has peeled off in some areas to bare metal. Old police car, the factory paint sucks.
Those interceptor crown vics are awesome. Do it 2 tone, brother! Also, watch my 1 year follow up video for a few more tips so you get the best results!
Great info. I have a utility trailer I built out of hot rolled steel to which spray balm paint just does not stick to. Gonna do the implement paint yet this year...thanks for the info
I feel like if you had a black car, and you sanded it down really good, and you just wanted 1 coat of flat black.... you could get the quart and come out looking like a champ.
Thought I'd give this a go , I prepped as I would to spray , for some reason I just cannot get rid of the roller marks ! I've tried to wet and dry after a few day . Maybe it's because I'm going sheen black
@4:00 Really? People made meth out of aircraft stripper? I remember in the 1980's I was working at a tractor trailer dealership in Orlando FL. The boss had these 2 morons using aircraft stripper on a semi-trailer, they were not wearing gloves. After a while the skin on their hands was blistering up just like the paint does. They were in a world of pain when they asked the shop foreman to have someone drive them to a clinic. He said no, I'm not wasting another worker just to drive you 2 to the clinic. It was too late to save the skin anyway, but I could hear him crying while trying to drive the shop truck w/out power steering and manual trans. as his skin stretched loose from his fingers. Both of their hands looked like something from a horror movie. They came back with mummy wrapped hands. That's not the end of the story, but all that's relevant to the comment section...
@@Rick-qf5de LOVED that comment! All jokes aside though, some people are just idiots. If they intentionally ignore safety instructions and refuse to take basic and necessary precautions with chemicals and machinery, then terrible things like this happen. I feel absolutely stupid wearing eye protection, gloves, and boots when I'm working on projects but it's saved me many trips to the ER :)
Watch the 1 year follow up video. Also read comments in the short edit video. There’s tons of answers there! It’s worth checking out. Big fan of penetrol and “brush and tip”
Well after much searching, I found 2 quarts on eBay that are already in CA. Ford Red. I'll send a photo when it's done. Oh, and I live in a little slice of coastal paradise that I would never consider leaving. 🥰
Tractor supply paint or Rural King paint is GARBAGE. I made the mistake of repainting our horse trailer with their "house brand" paint. Color faded first year very badly and paint started to fail after 2 years. I'd like to hear about this Rust-Oleum after 3 or 4 years. Cheap automotive paint, which is far superior to Rust-Oleum is available for just a little more and it will last a long time.
I once saw a 3 series BMW, brandnew, and the owner, the absolute moron, had painted the new paint with underbody tar paint. It looked like shit. The tar morphed into a hardened Asphalt with nooks and crannies all over the place. Partially bleached out it wasn't even consistently black but looked more like a dirty street.
No no noooo. There's so many body shops heavily invested in education, equipment and shop space. Just pay them the $6000 and give back to the community. Money isn't everything. We've got to look out for one another.
Im about to roll paint my 48 Ford 8N tractor, thank you for the detailed process you went through and sharing, definitely boosted my confidence in the process. The old tractor is a worker not a show stopper and this will help her look just a bit nicer.
That’s awesome. I would encourage you to pressure wash that thing first and give it a good wipe down to make sure you’re not fighting any grease. also make sure that the paint is warm and that the tractor is warm for the entire process as well as for it to dry for a day or two. Good luck! I know it’ll turn out great.
Did it on my '79 van. No mineral spirits. 4" foam roller. Barely sanded anywhere, hope it sticks! Looks great. Thanks for the info.
Heck yeah!
hows it holding up 8mo later?
@@aliencat1001 No problems so far. Amazing paint. Gonna do my '74 superbeetle this year with John Deere colors.
@@DJDAVEKHENThat’s going look super cool!
Every thing you said makes sense. If they don’t fallow your direction they can not complain. I did that on a unwanted door . It came out perfect now i will do my car.
Good luck!
This man is an absolute expert on this subject
Dang Robert. Thanks for the compliment. I tried to be thorough. I'll probably do my old tractor this summer and offer a few more tips I learned that I didn't mention.
To be clear to everyone wondering It’s OIL BASED enamel, not to be confused with Acrylic Enamel.
Thank you!! Absolutely!
This seems the easiest to understand. I appreciate your suggestions on supplies.
Glad it was helpful! Good luck! Please go to my channel and watch the one year follow up video because there’s a few tips that I missed in these earlier videos.
Thank You for all the information! The video was fun to watch and I like your approach to things when you do them yourself, sometimes you just need to fix things just so, no more no less, you are not restoring a classic here, you are making more appealing a vehicle that you just use every day look cleaner and put together! And sometimes that is just what is needed! Thank you again for your video!
Thank you for your comment. You fully understand. I’ve had so many people lecture me on why it was foolish not to spray or have a professional do it or many other complaints. They completely miss the point of what was done here.
I hope you’ll subscribe and I hope I’ll hear from you on other videos!
Thanks again!
Id recommend someone looking to try this method, paint an exterior door on your house. It's the same process, same tools, materials. And most doors could use a nice cleaning, sand fill and fill dings on there front door? Home depot even gave me a can of bondo when I complained about a dented door they delivered.
This would work great for exterior doors.
@@thejoyoffixing I do property management, enamels the way to go for front doors...
This sounds great. My daughter wants her silver Xterra to get a black roof. The low gloss black Rust-Oleum sounds perfect. May do the front hood and back hatch too, depending on how the roof looks. Get a silver/black two tone thing going.
That black roof is going to make that car incredibly hot.
@@thejoyoffixing my Expedition is black...
Thank you! I recently acquired a used truck fiberglass cap and I think I'm going to roller paint it. My garage is attached to my house so spraying it isn't an option. It's to cold out side this time of year to spray paint. So I will give it try with the roller. Thank you for all the great tips!
That’s awesome! A truck topper is the perfect application. I’m positive you’ll be happy! Just make sure you’re painting and drying in a warm space. Also, watch my other 3 videos in this series and there are some good tips, especially the 2 year follow up video
@@thejoyoffixing ok thank you!
I love this!! Thank you so much for posting!!! I just need to get all my supplies… and find my color!😂❤🎉so ready to get started!
You got this!
I use a brush, usually, but you have encouraged me to try a roller. I have 3 tractor painting projects coming up, and my business partner has pickup trucks that need paint. I will try!
The roller is awesome! What I really suggest is thinning it out a bit and then rolling on and finishing with a brush! That’s gonna be the smoothest! The brush tips will knock down the roller texture a lot
For the acetone, get regular/not disposable, nitrile gloves to protect your hands. The acetone can't eat through those.
Yeah. I have had acetone on my hands hundreds of times. It’s not bad. What’s bad is when it melts something to your hand. Not great.
Yes, and love yourself as much as I love you - acetone gets absorbed thru your skin, and your body just does not need that toxic load.
I was feeling pretty depressed after getting an outrageous estimate from MAACO for my old Honda. Now I know what I'm gonna do! Thanks for the great info.😀
Heck yeah! Watch my 1 year follow up video to get a few more tips I learned.
@@thejoyoffixing Damn! I got all my supplies, started some bondo and rust sanding, and just waiting for the paint to arrive. Perfect color. Just got a notice that it was returned to sender. Not available in California!! Now I have to rethink everything.🤬
@@EdKrebs-jb7voOrder it delivered to a store just across the state line and pick it up in person. Every hardware store in America carries farm/implement paint.
@@johnelder4273 Ha! It's about a 500 mile round trip to the nearest border. 🤣🤣
@@EdKrebs-jb7vo May have a dispensation for "commercial" use. So, try ordering from Grainger.
Thanks im gonna try this on our farm truck, that had the same delamination your Honds had. Used the rustoleum on our tractors on small places, never crossed my mind to do the truck!!
THANKS again.
Hope your medical issues get resolved.
Thank you. Got a surgery coming up in April. Hoping that helps! Good luck on the truck!
@@thejoyoffixing we'll be hoping and praying for your surgery to go well keep us on your channel informed, if possible.
Thanks so much.
I’ve started on my 2008 Honda. My question is, can this paint be wet sanded, buffed, or compounded, and how long should I wait to do it after a thick or multiple coats. Thank you very much.
I noticed you made a comment about painting a black car, with the black paint, which is exactly what I was planning on doing, so what should my reservations be? I would be ok with semigloss in place of high gloss if that is available. I would appreciate your advice. Thanks Paul
If you’re using this tractor paint, I don’t think it comes in different gloss options. It’s glossy because there’s so much enamel in it. If you need something else you’re going to end up going with maybe one of the other enamel rust oleum. You might have to do a little more research on that.
@@thejoyoffixing ok thanks for the reply 👍🏼
Any time!
Very good explanations! Thank you!
You are welcome!
In the 90's I decided to remove basement composite floor tiles, many had some lose, and I wanted to replace with sheet vinyl flooring. I used a product called stripeez, which I no longer see available. The "glue" under the tiles was some sort of black asphalt, and couldn't scrape it off. So I put that stripeez on it, but it was flashing off too quick and was too strong without using a fan for fresh air, which just made it flash even faster. I was bummed out for awhile, then came up with an idea to try. So, put on sections with the stripeez, immediately rolled on motor oil. That did it. It kept the stripper from flashing off too quick and cut down on excess fumes. I was then able to scrape all that old asphalt (home from 60's) the tiles were set into, and finally able to install the vinyl sheet flooring. So, I wonder if similar approach would work well for stripping car paint, allowing the stripper underneath the oil cover to work better. I guess that stripeez is one of the older ones you mentioned no longer produced. There is one with similar name and I'm guessing that's what replaced the old version I had in the 90's.
Very nice
Hey man are your Farm tractor 🚜 Restoleum Roll paint jobs on your cars still good?
Absolutely. It handled direct impact from 2 different cars and literally took almost no damage. a Wet rag to clean up scuffs left from the OTHER cars paint and it was back to the way I had it. This paint has been BEYOND the toughness I expected.
@@thejoyoffixing wow! That's amazing! Thanks 👍 for the info bud. Maybe you should do an update on the paint.
Hi. Thanks for this.
How many coats did you do? How smooth was it? Can you show close up pics of the sheen? Did you sand between coats? Why not spray it on?
Almost all these questions will be answered multiple times in other comments. I’d repeat them, but I know it’s really well explained if you just scroll and read replies on the “short edit” of the actual car painting video I posted. I’ll be doing an update video in the next few weeks as well.
Thanks for watching, Dan!
Good advice
Thank you so much.
How many cans of paint you think you need for a 4 runner.
1 can
So i use the paint, can i wet sand or dry sand, to smooth it out, so i can compound and polish it? Please respond....because i really need to try this.....
I’ve not done either. Read the comments in this video: th-cam.com/video/Yw9O2mNKfkg/w-d-xo.htmlsi=03L3DIb00iWHsbFO
Look at comments about “roll and tipping”. Thinner paint more coats.
I dry sanded a run in my paint between coats. I cleaned with tack cloth, alcohol , acetone. Looked great after last coat.
Hey man thanks soo much for these videos, knowledge/experience- sharing, and being an inspiration to fellow DIYers. I used regular gloss white rustoleum to roll onto my 21 year old car and it held up 4-5 years before specks on the roof started flaking off. The car was never garaged, rarely ever washed, and never clear-coated. But now I'm interested in using this Tractor paint on a different vehicle for better longevity.
Quick question though....you mentioned wiping down the car with BOTH rubbing alcohol and then acetone before painting. Is that really necessary, or can you just use one or the other?
Acetone cleans off oils and adhesives really good. But rubbing alcohol is good. Just hit raw metal with a little primer!
the haters of rustoleum paint ,if you are too lazy to prep the car ,leave the paint in the can ,you will get out of your paint job ,what you put into it .what ever paint you use . stick to your crayons and coloring books .
I wouldn’t have said it that way but I do approve of this message.
I'm thinking of doing this. How much paint did you need? I'm wanting to paint my Chevy Silverado.
I don’t think I even used an entire gallon.
Make sure to watch the 1 year follow up video for a few extra tips
@@thejoyoffixing I have. More than once. I think I'm obsessing too much. (Being clinically OCD doesn't help, lol) Anyways... I'm thinking Rust-Oleum farm paint because of the affordability and the durability. And I'm leaning towards a dark Olive green. Since they don't have that, I'll have to mix black and yellow. Just wanting to make sure I have enough to do it right. Thanks.
Dark green olive is a personal favorite. I have an old John deer gator I’m about to get working on and I’m gonna probably paint it.
Black and yellow will make the olive green? No blue? I’m curious.
@@thejoyoffixing yep. I think there's a couple of methods. But the simplest is yellow and black. I'm experimenting with it now. I think a 3 part yellow and 1 part black looks pretty good. I tried a 2:1 yellow to black, but it came out a bit dark. I bought a couple of bottles of paint from Walmart for like 60 cents a piece so I could try it out. I want to do the body Olive green, and the hood and rims and grill black. I think it'll have a military look.
That sounds awesome. You better post it and let me know. I’m excited to see it
What "nap" did you use? The 1/4 or 3/8 inch?
No nap. Foam roller.
Lots of people use Rustoleum, has anyone used something like Total Boat? Since it has UV protection, it might last longer than Rustoleum?
That's an interesting question. I've never heard of "total boat" but i'll look into it.
Would adding a hardner be good?
This paint has its own hardener built in
I wish they had the Rust-Oleum engine block paint in a bucket and not just spray cans....talk about heat not being an issue.
That would be awesome. That stuff is bullet proof
How long does this paint take to dry?
About 24 hours -48 hours for full cure. Dry to touch in 8 hours.
Great explanation thx!!
Glad it was helpful!
How many gallons did you use? Just 1?
Nvm, definitely only 1 needed, lol
Definitely only 1!
Good info, I'll be painting my 1998 dodge 350 van wagon come summer. I liked the video and subscribed. TKS.
I am considering a textured look, got any ideas on how to do it, do they make a four inch roller that leaves a textured look?
Don't do the textured look. It'll end up uneven. Get yourself some primer and make sure to hit any areas that are down to bare metal. If you're going for a flat paint, I recommend the Rustoleum Enamel Paint applied the same way. Use the foam roller.
Thanks for subscribing. I have some cool new content coming after the new year.
@@thejoyoffixing 👍 TKS.
@nehpetsrellek2750 how did your van hold up? I'm about to roller paint my 00 ram 3500 van
thank you so much for sharing good info, Im about to paint an old ford van this is very helpful
Awesome! Glad this helped! Again, I'll say, I recommend using primer on any areas that are bare metal. Just to make sure your bond is good! Otherwise, everything I said I stand by! Hope it goes great! Let me know!
Is primer paint really necessary?
I didn’t use any but honestly it’s such an easy step I’d recommend it. However, this paint has held up just fine so far.
@@thejoyoffixing interesting, where i live (reunion island) i dont have the brand rustoleum, but a local brand paint oil with antirust propertie for metal use
@@G_STYLIN Krylon would also be acceptable. What you're describing sounds ok. Might just apply a little different than what we used.
Can this paint be mixed into any color or is it limited colors?
You have to mix it yourself using the base colors they sell. For our color I mixed ford blue and black
@@thejoyoffixingok .Thanks for the reply.Nice job on the van.
Thanks
I have a gallon of Acetone would that be fine to thin the paint with before rolling?
I’m not sure how acetone reacts with the enamel. I’d imagine it’s fine but you should check with rustoleum
I am about to test this out on a van too. So excited.
Watch all the videos first. The long edit and the 1 year follow up
Will 400 grit sand paper work for this? I’ve sanded with this and feel it’s ready but wondering your thoughts
Seems a little light. I’d go rougher
@@thejoyoffixing you think 320 grit will work? Or what’s your recommendation?
For context, I used 400 grit to prep my car hood that had minor sun damage, I then used primer, painted it black with a spray can, and then a clear coat but it turned out bad. Flakes everything etc. I sanded it with 400 grit and there’s clearly no clear coat now and down to the black coat. What should I do? 320 on it then paint with the Rust-Oleum tractor and implement? I have the paint but want to make sure it sticks. Like I said it’s 400 grit sanded now. Thanks for your videos and input!
I'm going to to this to my 2007 Crown Victoria that the factory paint has peeled off in some areas to bare metal. Old police car, the factory paint sucks.
Those interceptor crown vics are awesome. Do it 2 tone, brother! Also, watch my 1 year follow up video for a few more tips so you get the best results!
Great info. I have a utility trailer I built out of hot rolled steel to which spray balm paint just does not stick to. Gonna do the implement paint yet this year...thanks for the info
Oh dude this is the key to a tough clean trailer. I have one I just picked up…. Maybe I’ll paint it with the leftover black!
home depot has 2 quarts for $25
I feel like if you had a black car, and you sanded it down really good, and you just wanted 1 coat of flat black.... you could get the quart and come out looking like a champ.
Nice quantity for mixing. Bet they have flotrol too!
Thought I'd give this a go , I prepped as I would to spray , for some reason I just cannot get rid of the roller marks ! I've tried to wet and dry after a few day . Maybe it's because I'm going sheen black
Yeah this is why I would roll on the paint then go back and roll out the roller lines.
Ok thanks , I'll give it another coat in a few days ! In the UK so not blessed with the gine weather 😅😅😅
What was your total cost for the supplies?
I paid around $200 for everything including the sander. However, you could do it for less.
Where did you get the Farm paint?
Tractor supply
@@thejoyoffixing Thank you Sir
Thank you!
Can i use a spray gun? Please advice 3:54 😊
You can but results might be different.
Excellent explanation...
Thanks so much.
i had to do my 2016 charger outside if u have to make sure your dad dosent decide to cut the grass
This is a pro tip right here!
LOL thanks for that! Crisis averted
@4:00 Really? People made meth out of aircraft stripper? I remember in the 1980's I was working at a tractor trailer dealership in Orlando FL. The boss had these 2 morons using aircraft stripper on a semi-trailer, they were not wearing gloves. After a while the skin on their hands was blistering up just like the paint does. They were in a world of pain when they asked the shop foreman to have someone drive them to a clinic. He said no, I'm not wasting another worker just to drive you 2 to the clinic. It was too late to save the skin anyway, but I could hear him crying while trying to drive the shop truck w/out power steering and manual trans. as his skin stretched loose from his fingers. Both of their hands looked like something from a horror movie. They came back with mummy wrapped hands. That's not the end of the story, but all that's relevant to the comment section...
Tools are disposable , when they break you throw them in the garbage and you hire another tool.... 😮
It’s true
@@Rick-qf5de LOVED that comment! All jokes aside though, some people are just idiots. If they intentionally ignore safety instructions and refuse to take basic and necessary precautions with chemicals and machinery, then terrible things like this happen. I feel absolutely stupid wearing eye protection, gloves, and boots when I'm working on projects but it's saved me many trips to the ER :)
Can a hardener be used for more gloss and how much do I add, along with, say penetrol?
Watch the 1 year follow up video. Also read comments in the short edit video. There’s tons of answers there! It’s worth checking out.
Big fan of penetrol and “brush and tip”
For some reason Amazon cannot ship this paint to California.😭
Sounds like time to get out of California.
Sadly you might need to take a long drive to a neighboring state to get your paint.
Well after much searching, I found 2 quarts on eBay that are already in CA. Ford Red. I'll send a photo when it's done.
Oh, and I live in a little slice of coastal paradise that I would never consider leaving. 🥰
Tractor supply paint or Rural King paint is GARBAGE.
I made the mistake of repainting our horse trailer with their "house brand" paint.
Color faded first year very badly and paint started to fail after 2 years.
I'd like to hear about this Rust-Oleum after 3 or 4 years.
Cheap automotive paint, which is far superior to Rust-Oleum is available for just a little more and it will last a long time.
Not my experience, but open to all experiences here! We all have seen things from our own eyes.
I once saw a 3 series BMW, brandnew, and the owner, the absolute moron, had painted the new paint with underbody tar paint.
It looked like shit. The tar morphed into a hardened Asphalt with nooks and crannies all over the place. Partially bleached out it wasn't even consistently black but looked more like a dirty street.
Oh man that’s absolutely nasty. Poor choice!
No no noooo. There's so many body shops heavily invested in education, equipment and shop space. Just pay them the $6000 and give back to the community. Money isn't everything. We've got to look out for one another.
I’m good, buddy
Wait you aren't serious are you? You got to be joking This can't be a serious comment.
Money isn't everything, but when you don't have enough. You do what you gotta do. Plus painting by hand is fun.
you forgot the /s for sarcasm homie
Oh sorry, because I have 6 grand to “give back to the community”