Well, the stripping and repainting of my C-180 has been quite a process.
It is not my first time but sadly it does not really seem to get easier.
It sure is a lot of work and I will be glad to be done.
A problem with the finish has recently evolved and I do not currently have an answer to what has happened. Suggestions welcome.
Some background - painting with EP2C Endura epoxy primer and base coating with Endura EX2C Matterhorn White. I personally have done the paint stripping and then transport the pieces to the local auto body shop where I do the prepping with Alumiprep and Alodine. After rinsing, the components are left to dry overnight before paint application on day 2 by the on site paint technician.
It all started out fine, good results on the elevators, flaps, rudder, doors, struts, vertical and horizontal stabs, both wings painted all ok.
Then when the fiberglass Selkirk cowlings were painted, the finish turned bad. The painter calls it "solvent pop", kind of a rough sandpaper finish which seems to emerge while curing. After paint application, it all seems fine. We left it sitting for a few hours with the ventilation fans running and it all looked good. At 5 pm he shut the fans off and went home. The next day the patchy, sporadic sandpaper finish was there on the cowls. This had not occurred on any of the other pieces, so I attributed it to some kind of contamination on the fiberglass cowling.
Last Thursday I proceeded to prep the fuselage, and Friday the primer and paint was applied, same process as all the rest of the aluminum components. When we finished painting the fuselage, it all looked just fine, but on Monday morning some patchy sandpaper sections appear on some areas of the fuselage, mostly on top but a bit on the side.
Wondering what has happened, what has changed?
Perhaps the ventilation fans need to run longer?
This is a frustrating development ...
It looks like the rough areas will have to be sanded and repainted.
Hoping this is not a prepping or contamination problem which will affect paint adherence.
Suggestions welcome. Thanks