While I did condition Inspection on friends RV-12iS, the owner polished his plane. It is polished with accent stripes similar to picture below. Sitting outside for 2 years without re-polish, I am reevaluating my Plan A of going polished on my RV-7 project, like below picture. I love the look...
SHORT STORY, What is your Opinion of Polish vs Paint, especially want you polished guys think? Talk me into POLISH or NOT?
Here is my long winded evaluation:
Polish:
Paint
It has to be said. I would rather a bare plane, even a slightly oxidized one, than a plane with bad paint job. I can paint, but been awhile until 2 days ago. I repaired the RV-12iS's spinner (scratched to heck by owner taking cowl off and on) and the cowl, at intake NACA scoop. It was too close to #1 exhaust pipe, put burn in cowl. My composite repair (including carbon and high temp resin) and paint came out great. I can do a good paint job given time, space, good materials (I have an good gun and air compressor). Small parts off plane makes painting far easier. I was worried because I never shot base/clear, which is what the builder used. He had the left over materials. My finish coat experience includes many other materials, and single stage Urethane. Despite ~78F degrees and +70% humidity, the clear came out clear and smooth. I was so worried but it worked out beautifully. I have one minor imperfection that will sand and buff out (but have to wait 7 days at least by spec sheet).
The Owners paint is full of orange peal and dry areas. It could be 2000 sanded and buff, some areas. The dry areas, I could also sand and re-clear, but I am not getting paid... It is a 20-foot Paint Job. However because the paint is just cowl and accent strips and tips, with the polish dominating, it looks good on the ramp.
Bottom line I think
I've given up on something like the RV-4 Pic below for my RV-7 ?
Talk me into POLISH or NOT?
I also worry (may be needlessly) if I go polished and want to paint later, getting buffing compound wax into every little crevice will case paint issues?
If I paint timing, early spring or late fall to get lower humidity and mid temps. All doable. The only question I guess is single stage or base/clear. Now that I am no longer a base/clear novice, and it came out great, I am looking at that, vs single stage. I do NOT want to have to wet sand and buff the whole plane to get clear to look decent. Rather do it right the first time. I also am going to paint pre final assembly. I would rather paint the wings, horz stab in the vertical. Bottom of fuselage, with no wings or tail you can tip up on nose, slightly easier.
SHORT STORY, What is your Opinion of Polish vs Paint, especially want you polished guys think? Talk me into POLISH or NOT?
Here is my long winded evaluation:
Polish:
Saving weight - This RV-12iS BEW 744lbs no wheel pants, light kit, deluxe interior, G3X w/ dual servo A/P. Van's states RV-12iS empty ~ 760 lbs, but 775 lbs is typical.
Cost - obviously Pro paint job cost way more ($20K to $25) than a good polisher, pads and Nuvite / Flitz / Rolite polish, and time, lots of time.
RV-12iS wings came off to polish bottoms, and put on saw horses. Can't do that with an RV-7 practically.
If plane is in hanger I guess you can get by with once a year re-polish? Every other year? Once well polished and kept up, subsequent polishes are not bad (so I am told)? Even an "easy" polish is a lot of labor. It definitely will not be as bad as this RV-12iS after 2 yrs outside. I don't think he even washed it?
Dave Anders? Café Foundation challenge Record Performance winner in his polished RV-4 (now painted). I had pleasure of meeting him at Oshkosh 10-15 yrs ago. He had is plane on display in place of prominence on the main flight line road. He told crew not to move due to sun reflection on canopy. They moved it. Dave had it positioned so sun would not reflect back onto canopy. Well the way the crew re-originated his RV-4, the sun melted the canopy. Polished low wing this is a consideration. Not sure about in flight reflections? ANY ONE?
Paint
Professional full paint $20K. DYI, about $6,000. Ball park if you are careful 30lbs to 40lbs extra weight. However maintenance is far easier and you can make a creative statement.
It has to be said. I would rather a bare plane, even a slightly oxidized one, than a plane with bad paint job. I can paint, but been awhile until 2 days ago. I repaired the RV-12iS's spinner (scratched to heck by owner taking cowl off and on) and the cowl, at intake NACA scoop. It was too close to #1 exhaust pipe, put burn in cowl. My composite repair (including carbon and high temp resin) and paint came out great. I can do a good paint job given time, space, good materials (I have an good gun and air compressor). Small parts off plane makes painting far easier. I was worried because I never shot base/clear, which is what the builder used. He had the left over materials. My finish coat experience includes many other materials, and single stage Urethane. Despite ~78F degrees and +70% humidity, the clear came out clear and smooth. I was so worried but it worked out beautifully. I have one minor imperfection that will sand and buff out (but have to wait 7 days at least by spec sheet).
The Owners paint is full of orange peal and dry areas. It could be 2000 sanded and buff, some areas. The dry areas, I could also sand and re-clear, but I am not getting paid... It is a 20-foot Paint Job. However because the paint is just cowl and accent strips and tips, with the polish dominating, it looks good on the ramp.
Bottom line I think
I also worry (may be needlessly) if I go polished and want to paint later, getting buffing compound wax into every little crevice will case paint issues?
If I paint timing, early spring or late fall to get lower humidity and mid temps. All doable. The only question I guess is single stage or base/clear. Now that I am no longer a base/clear novice, and it came out great, I am looking at that, vs single stage. I do NOT want to have to wet sand and buff the whole plane to get clear to look decent. Rather do it right the first time. I also am going to paint pre final assembly. I would rather paint the wings, horz stab in the vertical. Bottom of fuselage, with no wings or tail you can tip up on nose, slightly easier.
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