You are correct, that was only the second time he had sprayed some thing for real. All my students practice on 18inch X 24inch panels. he has improved greatly since this video. Thanks for watching!
wow he did a great job so did you i'm just getting started learning as we flip cars on the side and some need new parts which i paint but i'm still a newbie but i always did base and clear as napa told me single stage won't match the gloss or something like that as will be paint matching which they will match the paint code but i'll start doing single stage a lot better how many coats should i do
It depends on the brand of paint, but a good quality single stage paint will cover with three coats. I teach to put one really light coat (called a tack coat) then two medium to full wet coats. Thanks for watching!
That's a loaded question. Normally single stage paint will adhere a bit better than base-coat, unless you seal the substrate first. Also as a rule single stage seems to be a tougher paint (holds up to industrial work). In this case we used it because it was cheaper and faster than base-clear, and the tailgate is for a old farm truck. Thanks for watching!
Too far back, you should be 4 to 6 inches away from your panel. He's so very far back the paint goes on dry and thin, so to get it wet at that distance you need to move very slow. It's good for apprentices while learning the product and guns, but once I see my Apprentice's getting comfortable in the booth I'll tell them get in closer, and adjust gun settings to account for it. But far back and very slow is playing it safe for beginners while still getting good results. But it's definately not ideal down the road because you'll consume allot more product and product ain't cheap. Hope that helps
All students start learning to paint with single stage. Single stage is a great way to start learning gun control, plus with the limited amount of time (my 10th graders only have an hour and half classes) Base-clear takes to long. Not to mention single stage is a quarter of the cost of the water-born base coat that is now used. The single stage we use sprays almost the same as urethane clear. Thanks for watching!
@@sussextechautobody9914 I personally think single stage is good to learn with. It's not so forgiving, especially with metallics and will show modeling if it's not being layed right. Nice Job!
Finally some One is teaching how you should apply paint
nice job showin the young man....great roll model you are!
Thanks for watching
Wow with that energy you inspire me to be setting on my couch watching fast and the furious..
Good job! I love single stage paint. Plain old school.
Thanks for watching!
I can tell he hasn't been spraying long cause of his movement aren't smooth BUT He got it DOWN.
You are correct, that was only the second time he had sprayed some thing for real. All my students practice on 18inch X 24inch panels. he has improved greatly since this video. Thanks for watching!
That's why it says "one of my STUDENTS"
@@SOLDOZER ?
Praise God nice to see a young person interested in something more than a video game keep at it young man the world's yours
Thanks for watching!
Those shoes are not going to remain white anymore - oops! Nice paint job on the tailgate.
HaHa your right!
wow he did a great job so did you i'm just getting started learning as we flip cars on the side and some need new parts which i paint but i'm still a newbie but i always did base and clear as napa told me single stage won't match the gloss or something like that as will be paint matching which they will match the paint code but i'll start doing single stage a lot better how many coats should i do
It depends on the brand of paint, but a good quality single stage paint will cover with three coats. I teach to put one really light coat (called a tack coat) then two medium to full wet coats.
Thanks for watching!
Nice job!
Thanks for watching!
Very nice
Nice job kid 👍
if you get a run in single stage how do you repair it
Wet sand and buff, just like clear coat.
thank you @@sussextechautobody9914
Nice job 👍
Thanks for watching.
Love to see young techs learning the trade.
Okay my question is what's better single stage or base coat and why?
That's a loaded question. Normally single stage paint will adhere a bit better than base-coat, unless you seal the substrate first. Also as a rule single stage seems to be a tougher paint (holds up to industrial work). In this case we used it because it was cheaper and faster than base-clear, and the tailgate is for a old farm truck.
Thanks for watching!
@@sussextechautobody9914 thanks for reply
How long do you wait in between coats? Looks good 👍
It depends on the temp, we were spraying at around 70-75* so 6-10 minutes between coats is normally good.
What paint did u use
PPG Delfleet Essential ESSS9000 Factory Package Black
wow i thought the clear coat would make it shinny, i seen others that just use single stage black and it comes out shinny then adding clear coat
Why he moving so slow? Low PSI?
Too far back, you should be 4 to 6 inches away from your panel. He's so very far back the paint goes on dry and thin, so to get it wet at that distance you need to move very slow. It's good for apprentices while learning the product and guns, but once I see my Apprentice's getting comfortable in the booth I'll tell them get in closer, and adjust gun settings to account for it. But far back and very slow is playing it safe for beginners while still getting good results. But it's definately not ideal down the road because you'll consume allot more product and product ain't cheap. Hope that helps
Good job
Thanks for watching!
Hows james doing now, OH, he switched to home baking class..Gotcha..Good move
when you say single stage did you mean acrylic laquer ?
I am referring to urethane single stage, Where I live you can't even buy lacquer paint anymore.
Thanks for watching!!
@@sussextechautobody9914 thanks I didnt know they have urethane single stage did you mean 2K, So does it have a iso hardener?
@@zdravkomomci7570 Yes it has a hardener and reducer. The brand we use at Tech is PPG DelFleet, It works great!
At what psi is he spraying that?
That gun sprays well at 19-21 psi. Thanks for watching!
@@sussextechautobody9914 Thank you
Spray suit just as important as a mask covering his skin rule number 1 with ppe
Hello brother I am also Bignner
Nice job
Which paint do you use
This job was done using PPG Delfleet Essential, it is a great urethane single stage. Thanks for watching!
🦁
Tell him to put that airline over his shoulder
This guy's hose control is stressing me out
he is new and learning and he did a fine job for a newbie, like you was born with great hose control trolls
🇮🇳
This is horrible single stage paint is like earl scheib paint school teaching always clearcoat
All students start learning to paint with single stage. Single stage is a great way to start learning gun control, plus with the limited amount of time (my 10th graders only have an hour and half classes) Base-clear takes to long. Not to mention single stage is a quarter of the cost of the water-born base coat that is now used. The single stage we use sprays almost the same as urethane clear. Thanks for watching!
@@sussextechautobody9914 I personally think single stage is good to learn with. It's not so forgiving, especially with metallics and will show modeling if it's not being layed right. Nice Job!