mulde35d
Well Known Member
So after roughly 150 hours of sanding, cleaning, fairing, priming, a lot more sanding and waaaay more cleaning. I finally sprayed my first layer of paint. And what do I get, a very uniform layer of orange peel across both my left wing and my wheel fairings.
I am using Delfleet evolution paint series with 1 coat wash primer, 3 coats sanding surfacer (sanded smooth), and 2 coats paint. I figure it has to be a gun setup / mixture issue because the orange peel is incredibly uniform and I have good coverage (spraying 6-8 inches away from the material). I am using a Fuji Mini-mite 4 HVLP with an Apollo spray gun (1.3mm tip). My pressures and spray tips are per the specific paint chart recommendation and the temperatures were near optimal at 72 degrees and 37% humidity. Since I can't change the pressure on the HVLP spray system, my gun is set to maximum air, and I am spraying fairly thin (not quite covering with first coat), I am told I need to either thin the paint with additional reducer or reduce the spray tip to 1.0 to help with atomization.
I am going to try the additional reducer by about 20% and see how that works. Really looking forward to re-sanding the left wing and applying another coat of paint. Of note, I tried to wet sand and polish first, but i started sanding through in some areas so I figure re-sanding and re-spraying is my best bet.
For those wondering about how much paint to buy. Here is what I have used / think I will use for painting the exterior of the RV-10
Wash Primer (1 coat): 1:1 mixture = 1 gallon primer / 1 gallon hardener (aluminum parts only)
Sanding Surfacer (3 coats): 3:1:10% mixture = 3 gallons surfacer / 1 gallon hardener / 1 gallon reducer
Paint (2 coats): 4:2:1 mixture = 2 gallons paint / 1 gallon hardener / 1 gallon reducer
Feel free to offer other suggestions, I am all ears. (and yes, the pictures are the same parts and the same color, just different lighting.)



I am using Delfleet evolution paint series with 1 coat wash primer, 3 coats sanding surfacer (sanded smooth), and 2 coats paint. I figure it has to be a gun setup / mixture issue because the orange peel is incredibly uniform and I have good coverage (spraying 6-8 inches away from the material). I am using a Fuji Mini-mite 4 HVLP with an Apollo spray gun (1.3mm tip). My pressures and spray tips are per the specific paint chart recommendation and the temperatures were near optimal at 72 degrees and 37% humidity. Since I can't change the pressure on the HVLP spray system, my gun is set to maximum air, and I am spraying fairly thin (not quite covering with first coat), I am told I need to either thin the paint with additional reducer or reduce the spray tip to 1.0 to help with atomization.
I am going to try the additional reducer by about 20% and see how that works. Really looking forward to re-sanding the left wing and applying another coat of paint. Of note, I tried to wet sand and polish first, but i started sanding through in some areas so I figure re-sanding and re-spraying is my best bet.
For those wondering about how much paint to buy. Here is what I have used / think I will use for painting the exterior of the RV-10
Wash Primer (1 coat): 1:1 mixture = 1 gallon primer / 1 gallon hardener (aluminum parts only)
Sanding Surfacer (3 coats): 3:1:10% mixture = 3 gallons surfacer / 1 gallon hardener / 1 gallon reducer
Paint (2 coats): 4:2:1 mixture = 2 gallons paint / 1 gallon hardener / 1 gallon reducer
Feel free to offer other suggestions, I am all ears. (and yes, the pictures are the same parts and the same color, just different lighting.)



