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#16
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"Jim Stewart" wrote I had a Ford Taurus that did the exact same thing. Along with the garbage auto transmission, I haven't forgiven Ford either. I have a feeling that all of the big three transmissions are little more than junk. I grew up with automatic transmissions, and never remember them breaking, even with high mileage vehicles. It seems like they design them to go 90 to 110 thousand miles, then they are prone to require rebuilding, at any time. IMHO, they ought to go at least 200 thousand without a glitch. They could build them that way, for a few dollars more, but that does not seem to be the priority. I was told that the reason it happened is that Ford purposely omitted the primer and put the color coat directly on the sheetmetal. That was not the case with my GM van. There was definitely gray primer under the light blue paint. I know, because I sanded it down, to bare metal. I was afraid that the primer was part of the problem, and if any was left, it would cause the problem, again. Let me tell you, there is a lot of surface area on a full sized van! I primed it, and painted it with a NAPA one step white fleet color paint (no clear coat) and it has not had a problem since. I learned a lot with that job. One, I hate body work, and sanding. g Spray technique learned in painting and clear coating cabinetry carries through, to an extent, but there are big differences that would likely carry through to painting an airplane. The biggest problem, I thought, was dealing with keeping that big of a wet line. By the time you get all around the vehicle, how do you deal with the point where you have already painted, and the overspray? I did it by putting on a quick masking at the seam of the hood, so it did not get overspray from the last paint getting on the first paint. I don't know if that is right, but it worked for me. It seems to me that an airplane would be harder, since there are less seams, and it has to be painted on the bottom, also. How do people deal with blending the top to the bottom, or do they rotate them, and paint from the front to the back, all the way around, rotating as they go? -- Jim in NC |
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