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Hi
I am in the process of re painting my Landy, I keyed up the wings, bulkhead and the rest of the front end with 800 grit paper, then primered and rubbed the primer back with 1200 grit wet and dry. The seat boxes and rear tub had been painted so many times previously i had to take the paint completely off and etch prime, wet sand and only now after starting at Xmas am i nearly ready to paint.
I used 800 grit for areas that just needed keying up
1200 wet and dry for de-nibbing the etch primer, 5 sheets
A MILLION, yes a MILLION velcro orbital 800 grit sanding pads
Paint stripper was a total failure as this new stuff works too slowly, so I found that a wire wheel attachment fitted to a 4 inch angle grinder takes the paint off back the ali without leaving score marks.
I will be painting it with a roller and once dry will cut it back with 2500 grit paper and then roller it again, done it before with satin paint and it should come out with little or no roller marks.
Rear Cross member I took it back to bare steel, red oxide primer, then the grey etch primer, and i will roller black Hammerite on it.
As for filler, I don't really have any dents as such, apart from the very bottom of the bulkhead near the door is a little pitted so I just used some fine filler and baked it on with a halogen lamp for an hour or so and then sprayed filler primer over that once sanded back, definitely use tack cloths and panel wipes and I use brake cleaner to clean off the panels before I apply any paint to them.
I am boring myself now, lol
imo,
don't use anything as fine as 1200 unless it's for finishing. You will muck up the paint adhesion.
stick to 600/800 for the paint layers.
once finished, use 1200/1500 then use a cutting compound like g3, if you want really shiney then you can use g10 at the end or go for a couple clear coats.