Hello,
I have several years experience in detailing including wet sanding and buffing. I have removed some rust from the hood of my Sunfire using a wire wheel on a die grinder. All the rust has been removed and then gave it an acid treatment.
After cleaning up the area, I used bondo to fill in the imperfections, sanded down and smoothed her up. I gave the area several coats of black primer (my base is a dark blue) I figured this a closer match to the base.
I have little experience in painting and have no equipment or the funds to take it to a bodyshop. My local autoparts company can mix a good lacquer paint, I have used their paints before on an old Cirrus bumper.
I decided to use the spray bomb, but after shaking the can for a good couple of minutes I was getting constant splattering and it made a mess of course, in fact it looks awful. I`m going to have to sand it down and try again. Yesterday I went and purchased one of those trigger kits for spray bombs as my finger got really sore!
To avoid this splatter issue again, do you think the paint was not agitated enough? I tried another can and had the splatter issue again. Someone at work said I probably had not agitated the can enough.
I know spray bombs are not the ideal solution, but I cannot afford 500-900 that the shops around here would charge. I can wet sand and buff the hood after to help a little with the blend and shine. I was also told you can get different nozzles for the spray bombs which I wasn`t aware of.
What type of nozzle would you recommend for this, a wide one?
How long should I wait before I can wet sand and buff the spray bomb (lacquer)?
The spray bombs usually have a clear coat in the mix, should I still apply a separate clear?