Painting New Cars |
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Painting New Cars |
richardL |
Aug 25 2006, 02:06 PM
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#1
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Senior Member Group: Members Posts: 713 Joined: 27-January 03 From: San Diego, CA Member No.: 201 Region Association: None |
I've been reading threads and guides about re-painting cars recently, they are always stressing the quality usually comes from prep work, lots of sanding etc. rather than the actual act of spraying the paint.
So I was wondering, given how great the paint on most modern new cars is, how do they do it, straight from the production line? I assume they don't have hoards of workers buffing and rubbing the cars between coats, so... ...as I actually have very little idea of how its actually done, can someone either link me to an explanation of how new cars get painted and achieve the quality, or can someone explain the process. Thanks, R |
BGman |
Aug 25 2006, 02:13 PM
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#2
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Greg Group: Members Posts: 87 Joined: 18-January 04 From: Owensboro, KY Member No.: 1,575 Region Association: None |
I have no insight on this except that I have had the opportunity to tour a lot of auto plants....I would attribute it to having a perfectly clean and true piece to begin with, robotics that apply paint exactly the same way every time, and a tightly controled atmosphere temp and humidity.
Also, you might be suprised how many pieces of the body ARE pulled off the line to get hand buffed and cleaned up. |
URY914 |
Aug 25 2006, 02:53 PM
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#3
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I built the lightest 914 in the history of mankind. Group: Members Posts: 123,027 Joined: 3-February 03 From: Jacksonville, FL Member No.: 222 Region Association: None |
Perfect conditions, perfect panels, robots...
Attached image(s) |
McMark |
Aug 25 2006, 03:09 PM
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#4
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914 Freak! Group: Retired Admin Posts: 20,179 Joined: 13-March 03 From: Grand Rapids, MI Member No.: 419 Region Association: None |
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The big part is that the panels are perfect to begin with, so the factory can just assemble a chassis/body and prime then paint. No body work required. |
TravisNeff |
Aug 25 2006, 03:11 PM
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#5
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914 Guru Group: Members Posts: 5,082 Joined: 20-March 03 From: Mesa, AZ Member No.: 447 Region Association: Southwest Region |
some manufacturers end up with a lot of orange peel in their paint too.
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URY914 |
Aug 25 2006, 04:49 PM
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#6
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I built the lightest 914 in the history of mankind. Group: Members Posts: 123,027 Joined: 3-February 03 From: Jacksonville, FL Member No.: 222 Region Association: None |
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DonTraver |
Aug 25 2006, 07:10 PM
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#7
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Senior Member Group: Members Posts: 829 Joined: 5-August 04 Member No.: 2,461 |
If you want to see what it takes to paint a car, go to the Classic Forum look under "PPG vrs Omni Paint"
Later, Don |
Boojum |
Aug 25 2006, 10:02 PM
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#8
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Member Group: Members Posts: 95 Joined: 31-July 06 From: Denver, CO Member No.: 6,550 |
some manufacturers end up with a lot of orange peel in their paint too. Totally, I was next to one of the new Hummer2-inspired Jeeps (you look at one you just know), it was black and it orange peeled like crazy, over the whole body. We all know to expect orange peel on factory finishes, unless you're buying a Rolls-Royce or similar (and even then), but man this was just terrible and extremely noticeable. |
sww914 |
Aug 26 2006, 01:47 AM
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#9
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Advanced Member Group: Members Posts: 2,439 Joined: 4-June 06 Member No.: 6,146 Region Association: None |
Look up the side of a new f150, they're so orange peely it's unbelieveable.
The new cars that look perfect, Porsche, Mercedes, Lexus are polished. It's not possible to get a glass like finish with new low VOC paints without polishing, and it wasn't very common with older paints anyway. |
thomasotten |
Aug 26 2006, 05:46 AM
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#10
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Senior Member Group: Members Posts: 1,553 Joined: 16-November 03 From: San Antonio, Texas Member No.: 1,349 |
The biggest advantage I see is their ability to bake the paint after painting the unassembled body. We can't do that without melting plastic. That is why repainted panels always chip easier than factory.
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Slowpoke |
Aug 26 2006, 08:36 AM
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#11
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Member Group: Members Posts: 116 Joined: 1-June 03 From: Tucson, AZ Member No.: 768 |
10 million dollar paint booths and systems are the prime reason. And they just do a lot of them. Practice makes perfect, unless it's a ford!
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