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Sanding down to get high gloss showroom shine?

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  • Member since
    November 2005
Sanding down to get high gloss showroom shine?
Posted by Anonymous on Tuesday, June 7, 2005 3:31 AM
Hi, I bought a micro-scale, polishing kit that includes fine sanding films for a super gloss finish. I was wondering if anyone has used this before?

Am I suppose to:

Sand between all coats and then finish with the finest grit on the last color coat for the highest shine?

or:
Sand all between all color coats and then add a clear glodd overcoat for a high gloss finish? then wax?

Or:
Do I sand between all coats. then add a gloss clear coat and then sand up to the finiest grit and then wax?

Will sanding down a clear gloss coat get rid of the glossy-ness on the clear coat like when you sand down a gloss color coat? Thanks

I just want to get a high gloss glass-like showroom shine on my car models.

Thanks!

Jimmy
  • Member since
    November 2005
Posted by Anonymous on Tuesday, June 7, 2005 11:29 AM
Ive been trying and trying. personally Im abandoning the sanding method. biggest problem is that it ALWAYS ends up going through an edge somewhere; the paint isnt as thick at the edges and the sandpaper grabs better; you can go right through it in 1 pass if you make a mistake and boom your repainting the car.

when your all done; even up to 12000grit; its rough. Ive tried waxing it after and it helps; but it gets some swirl marks and on something that small; thats devastating to the overall appearance.

I asked here and some said to use printer paper as a sanding paper; that seems possible. I got decent results using a polishing compound also, not perfect but maybe with some practice it was the closest.

in the end I believe what is nescessary is a very close starting point which starts with the painting. if its almost perfect before; it wont need much polishing.

if you want to give the sanding a shot; and feel free, it cant hurt. I believe you sand after the primer to get the highs and lows in the model evened out. then you put down your paint coats which are applied extremely thin of course and about 5 minutes apart or 24+ hours apart(either still tacky, or completely dry). no sanding between because a single coat will ruin that, assuming there are no drips it shouldnt be nescessary to sand between coats.

sand at the end starting low untill its smooth and working your way up with each grit untill each grit has totally removed the last grits ridges and valleys working into smaller and smaller marks till they are small enough for wax to shine it up. watch those edges....
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