plastic polish on lexan?

Show off your paintwork, tips/tricks, decals, etc...

Moderators: scr8p, klavy69

badhoopty
Approved Member
Posts: 3753
Joined: Tue Feb 07, 2006 2:12 pm
Has thanked: 15 times
Been thanked: 35 times

plastic polish on lexan?

Post by badhoopty »

i am teh suck when it comes to painting bodies... i can trim and mount them killer, but when it comes to painting them i always blow it at some stage of the process...

i got overspray on my dahms buggsy body, so i tried alot of things to get it off. the last thing i tried was a scotch brite pad. i knew it was gonna scratch and dull up the body but thats a heck of alot better than silver overspray all over it. its a runner anyway...

anyhoo, any of you guys have any recommendations on how to get it somewhat shiney again?

User avatar
MelvinsArmy
Approved Member
Posts: 3224
Joined: Tue Feb 07, 2006 10:22 pm
Location: Des Moines, IA
Been thanked: 8 times

Post by MelvinsArmy »

Hopefully I'm wrong, but I'm pretty sure Lexan is extremely difficult to polish smooth again. At work we had a piece of art that had was framed with Lexan instead of the normal Plexi, and it had a huge scuff mark on the face. We were told it would be nearly impossible to get the scuff out, that it would have to be done by a professional plastic man with a buffer, and even after it was done, it would likely have a wavey surface. Lexan is very hard and difficult to polish. Or so I've been told.

justinspeed79
Approved Member
Posts: 1679
Joined: Sun Aug 13, 2006 10:54 pm
Location: Houston Texas
Has thanked: 2 times
Been thanked: 4 times

Post by justinspeed79 »

I have tried to polish lexan before with mediocre results. I found that a large diameter cotton polishing wheel at slow speed with red with red jewelers rouge will give it an OK finish, but nowhere close to new looking, it still has a cloudy look. There's probably a better way to do it, but that's the best way I know of. Hope that helps.

User avatar
scr8p
Administrator
Posts: 16527
Joined: Tue Feb 07, 2006 9:46 pm
Location: Northampton, PA
Has thanked: 28 times
Been thanked: 957 times

Post by scr8p »

we have a polish at the shop that we use to buff plastic heads lights. seems to work pretty good. i don't know the name of it off the top of my head, but i'll find out. you probably shouldn't have used a scotch brite pad to clean it off. i'm sure it put some wicked scratches in it, even if it doesn't look like it did. some very fine sandpaper would have been a better choice. and much easier to polish out.

User avatar
shodog
Approved Member
Posts: 3816
Joined: Thu Oct 05, 2006 3:09 pm
Location: Washington
Has thanked: 3 times
Been thanked: 86 times

Post by shodog »

I've used mothers polish and a buffing wheel and I got good results. you have to be really light on the touch otherwise you will melt the body.

In the future, Nitro fuel will easily remove any overspray you have. I have used it several times with excellent results. you should have seen the knarley bleed I fixed on this body

Image

Whiskers
Approved Member
Posts: 89
Joined: Sat Feb 10, 2007 6:42 pm

Re: plastic polish on lexan?

Post by Whiskers »

badhoopty wrote:i am teh suck when it comes to painting bodies... i can trim and mount them killer, but when it comes to painting them i always blow it at some stage of the process...

i got overspray on my dahms buggsy body, so i tried alot of things to get it off. the last thing i tried was a scotch brite pad. i knew it was gonna scratch and dull up the body but thats a heck of alot better than silver overspray all over it. its a runner anyway...

anyhoo, any of you guys have any recommendations on how to get it somewhat shiney again?
Next time you get overspray, let it dry and then hit it with "Brasso" polish or something like it.

After the scotch brite pad, you might have to do what I just got done doing, start with 600 and go to 2000 grit, wet sanding, and then polish your arms off.

User avatar
Eau Rouge
Approved Member
Posts: 2225
Joined: Sat Jul 29, 2006 11:59 pm
Location: Aurora, Illinois
Has thanked: 2 times
Been thanked: 2 times

Post by Eau Rouge »

Save the nitro fuel and other stuff to take off overspray. Go to Home Depot or Lowe's and pick up a quart of denatured alcohol from the paint department. While you're there, walk over to the cleaning/janitorial section and grab a cheap spray bottle or two.

Denatured alcohol is a MUST HAVE in the workshop. I draw out paint schemes sometimes on the outside of bodies with Sharpie markers, and remove it later with the alcohol. I also use it as a pre-paint body prep as well. It will remove all paint from hands, bodies, parts, and WILL NOT HARM LEXAN at all. I use it to clean just about everything, including my hands at times.

As far as the scratches, the Scotch-Brite was, as my grandfather used to say, pruning a rose-bush with a chainsaw. Extreme measures for overspray, and you probably indefinitely left pretty deep scratches in the body. There is a plastic polish system by a company called Novus that uses three different levels of polish to remove pretty hefty scratches from plastic. I've used it on everything from paint finishing on model cars to my iPod to Lexan bodies to sunglasses. It works pretty well, unless the scratches are massive.

I have polished up used race bodies with it before a Concours and had people think that the car wasn't used in the race before. You can see the Novus line here, though you can find it for purchase at a lot of places. I would recommend the whole system in the small bottles—it will last you forever.


BTW, these bodies were painted and faded (where you need a perfectly clean surface), using the denatured alcohol as final fingerprint removal and prep...

Image

Image

Image

Image

Image

User avatar
Eau Rouge
Approved Member
Posts: 2225
Joined: Sat Jul 29, 2006 11:59 pm
Location: Aurora, Illinois
Has thanked: 2 times
Been thanked: 2 times

Post by Eau Rouge »

Oh, and I should mention... don't smoke around denatured alcohol. It's like methanol in that it burns CLEAR flames. Could be a potential problem in the workshop if you start a fire that you cant see.

:shock:

User avatar
templeofspeed
Approved Member
Posts: 2087
Joined: Tue Aug 01, 2006 10:02 pm
Location: Central Ohio
Been thanked: 8 times

Post by templeofspeed »

Novus is great stuff! There is one other technique for polishing plastics, although it can be potentially disasterous:

http://www.txpinball.com/flame_polishing_pinball_ramps.html

Typically used on acrylics, although it may be worth experimenting on Lexan or polycarb...

I have done this on plexi, but have not tried on a Lexan body... perhaps Mr. Lexan will chime in on this one...

badhoopty
Approved Member
Posts: 3753
Joined: Tue Feb 07, 2006 2:12 pm
Has thanked: 15 times
Been thanked: 35 times

Post by badhoopty »

gawd... i have nitro fuel and denatured alchohol and at the time it never crossed my mind, even though i've read countless threads on how to strip paint off of lexan. as usual i was rushing everything and getting frustrated.

anyway, i wouldnt call the body scratched as much as i would dulled. i actually like how it made the clear windows a little hazy, i may just do it intentionally to windows in the future.

i swear to all of ya the next body i paint will be freaking amazing. i just need to slow down and try not to get it done in a couple hours.

btw doug your paint and schemes are amazing. what do you use to mask with?

User avatar
Eau Rouge
Approved Member
Posts: 2225
Joined: Sat Jul 29, 2006 11:59 pm
Location: Aurora, Illinois
Has thanked: 2 times
Been thanked: 2 times

Post by Eau Rouge »

badhoopty wrote:anyway, i wouldnt call the body scratched as much as i would dulled. i actually like how it made the clear windows a little hazy, i may just do it intentionally to windows in the future.
I donno how many of you guys race contemporary cars, but that's the current trend with wings. You scuff up the underside of a clear wing with a 3M pad and it gets a frosted look. No paint, and it doesn't get mangled with dirt from being clear. Kind of looks like sandblasted-etched glass.

btw doug your paint and schemes are amazing. what do you use to mask with?
Thanks. I use everything from Liquid Mask (Bob Dively's) to 3M painter's tape and 3M Auto Fine Line tape to airbrush frisket. I've also been screwing up paint jobs since 1983. ;)

badhoopty
Approved Member
Posts: 3753
Joined: Tue Feb 07, 2006 2:12 pm
Has thanked: 15 times
Been thanked: 35 times

Post by badhoopty »

kinda ot, doug i see that you have a really short antenna on one of your 4wd cars. i would assume its a spektrum that you trimmed the antenna on. hows the range with it trimmed? the manual pretty much says it wont make a difference, but i want to ask before i snip it.

you would be proud of me dude, my tuber project is all good stuff.

deans even...

;)

and also, when you use multiple masks on a paint job, do you wait for it to dry before removing the mask? and how do you prep the areas that were under the mask without harming the paint thats already layed down?

User avatar
Eau Rouge
Approved Member
Posts: 2225
Joined: Sat Jul 29, 2006 11:59 pm
Location: Aurora, Illinois
Has thanked: 2 times
Been thanked: 2 times

Post by Eau Rouge »

badhoopty wrote:kinda ot, doug i see that you have a really short antenna on one of your 4wd cars. i would assume its a spektrum that you trimmed the antenna on. hows the range with it trimmed? the manual pretty much says it wont make a difference, but i want to ask before i snip it.
I use DMS (Spektrum) on everything. 3.6" antenna from the top of the receiver case. Never had a problem in 3+ years of using it—indoors or outdoors. Best R/C invention since the RC10.

you would be proud of me dude, my tuber project is all good stuff.

deans even...

;)
That's how to do it. 100% on those rarities makes them that much more impressive.


and also, when you use multiple masks on a paint job, do you wait for it to dry before removing the mask? and how do you prep the areas that were under the mask without harming the paint thats already layed down?
Usually, I will use only one masking type on a body. If it's LM, it's all Liquid Mask. It has a different process and method of prep than tape.

If it's a tape job, the most important part of the masking is washing the body with warm water and liquid dish soap. Crucial if you plan any fades, candies, chromes, pearls or other paint stunts. Any oil, silicones (from your hands), mold release or other contaminants will show up in your first spray of the gun.

After the body is masked for the first color, I wipe the exposed down with a clean lint-free towel and denatured alcohol. It makes sure everything is perfect before I spray. After the first color (I use a heat gun to rapid dry), most water-based paints are still fragile and scratch or wipe off easily. I will spray the rag and clean off the second and third color areas before shooting to remove tape residue. Q-tips also help in the corner areas. If you're paranoid about washing it again, wait a few days for the first colors to cure and the paint should be hardened enough to quickly wipe down without too much worry.



:D

justinspeed79
Approved Member
Posts: 1679
Joined: Sun Aug 13, 2006 10:54 pm
Location: Houston Texas
Has thanked: 2 times
Been thanked: 4 times

Post by justinspeed79 »

Wow. That is one of the coolest paint jobs I have ever seen. Very nice work. Mind if I borrow the design?
Eau Rouge wrote:Image

User avatar
Eau Rouge
Approved Member
Posts: 2225
Joined: Sat Jul 29, 2006 11:59 pm
Location: Aurora, Illinois
Has thanked: 2 times
Been thanked: 2 times

Post by Eau Rouge »

justinspeed79 wrote:Wow. That is one of the coolest paint jobs I have ever seen. Very nice work. Mind if I borrow the design?

Yeah, I don't mind at all. I've been doing that tiger stripe for many years in various looks. ;) I'd love to see other's variations on a theme.

Post Reply

Create an account or sign in to join the discussion

You need to be a member in order to post a reply

Create an account

Not a member? register to join our community
Members can start their own topics & subscribe to topics
It’s free and only takes a minute

Register

Sign in

  • Similar Topics
    Replies
    Views
    Last post
  • Lexan Polish
    by LTO_Dave » » in The Paint / Body Shop
    1 Replies
    726 Views
    Last post by Charlie don't surf
  • Review of novus plastic polish for removing haze
    by JosephS » » in The Paint / Body Shop
    8 Replies
    1462 Views
    Last post by Lowgear
  • Lexan Baja Bug bodies, Mr Lexan, Bolink and Parma comparison
    by MelvinsArmy » » in The Paint / Body Shop
    10 Replies
    2725 Views
    Last post by MelvinsArmy
  • Polish anyone.
    by PTModIT » » in RC10 Buggy Forum
    15 Replies
    1920 Views
    Last post by Coelacanth
  • Sand before Polish
    by DMAT » » in Off-Topic / Chit-Chat
    4 Replies
    382 Views
    Last post by Kyoshojoe
  • to paint or polish
    by hotrodlincoln » » in RC10 Truck Forum
    1 Replies
    631 Views
    Last post by scr8p
  • Anyone polish Polished shapeways?
    by Minisforever » » in Off-Topic / Chit-Chat
    3 Replies
    1308 Views
    Last post by slotcarrod
  • diff ring polish
    by camlchris » » in R/C Off-Topic / Chit-Chat
    16 Replies
    2405 Views
    Last post by Group B

Return to “The Paint / Body Shop”

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 4 guests