Author Topic: Dyed door panels with SEM!  (Read 10603 times)

Offline falcon50flier

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Re: Dyed door panels with SEM!
« Reply #30 on: March 09, 2006 - 10:38:29 PM »
I first was trained on interior "reconditioning" products in the early 70s. The SEM product is professional grade, and applied to a properly prepared substrate will last years - 5 or more potentially depending on UV, ozone, and contact with interior dressings (Armor All, etc). It is even resistant to scratches, and can be easily touched up by lightly scuffing and reapplying.

As with any coating (it is a coating, not a dye in the true sense) it is all about prep. The prior post showing all the nifty SEM product actually omits the vinyl/leather prep cleaner, which I use on all substrates. You can start with SEM soap or get comparable results with Simple Green Industrial. (I like Simple Green wipes that come pre-moistened in a pull up container, super strong weave with a smooth side and a nubby side, and make great underside detailing wipes as well.) Then it depends on the piece I'm doing which products I use. I was taught NOT to scuff the substrate unless a repair (polyethelene sticks and welding kits from Urethane Supply Company - work great on interior plastics) was being performed. Not only does this preserve grain, but eliminates releasing any new contaminants from below the surface, or creating micro valleys where crap can hide. Anyway, the Simple Green cleaning followed by the Vinyl/leather prep cleaner, 99% of the time makes adequate prep. THe piece should look chalky and gloss free before applying the coating. I mist on a couple ultra light coats over a 10 minute period at 70 - 75F. Don't do this in a cold shop or you may waste the effort. It takes a little heat (air AND part up to temperature) for this to flash properly. Once the mist coats flash, two full coverage coats 15 minutes apart usually does it.

BTW, I like the Landau Black color for the E body interior. It has a satin gloss that is just right to my eye.
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Offline ROMI

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Re: Dyed door panels with SEM!
« Reply #31 on: March 10, 2006 - 04:47:48 AM »
Good info Falcon, thanks for your insight.

Offline Tropicalcats

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Re: Dyed door panels with SEM!
« Reply #32 on: March 10, 2006 - 05:16:09 AM »
F5F

This is panel related so let me ask.
 I will begin to restore my interior panels with the SEM products this weekend or next. On a rear piece I have a very brittle area at the point the the panel meets the package tray. What can I do to stop this before I apply my finsh coats?
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Offline dwbiggs

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Re: Dyed door panels with SEM!
« Reply #33 on: March 10, 2006 - 10:40:14 AM »
You need to get all loose stuff off the panel and get down to something solid before prepping and dying.

Dan

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Offline crcarch

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Re: Dyed door panels with SEM!
« Reply #34 on: March 26, 2006 - 07:26:00 AM »
How much of each of the SEM products should I buy to do the four side panels, two kick panels and A-pllar pieces?
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Offline Rev-It-Up

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Re: Dyed door panels with SEM!
« Reply #35 on: March 28, 2006 - 08:29:00 PM »
I used one of each of the cans below except for the black dye...I used just under 2 cans of that.
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Offline 70 rtse

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Re: Dyed door panels with SEM!
« Reply #36 on: March 30, 2006 - 05:43:05 AM »
Can you do the same on the dash.

Offline Rev-It-Up

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Re: Dyed door panels with SEM!
« Reply #37 on: March 31, 2006 - 08:58:17 AM »
I didn't do our dash, but I would think so.  We'll be dying Pixie's Duster's dash from gold to black in the next couple of weeks.  I'll post pics when done.
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Offline 70 rtse

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Re: Dyed door panels with SEM!
« Reply #38 on: April 15, 2006 - 02:03:45 AM »
Can i die the console the same way as you did the door panels

Offline MEK-Dangerfield

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Re: Dyed door panels with SEM!
« Reply #39 on: April 15, 2006 - 04:41:07 AM »
Can i die the console the same way as you did the door panels

Yes.  :thumbsup:

Mike

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Offline ply340cuda

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Re: Dyed door panels with SEM!
« Reply #40 on: April 17, 2006 - 11:19:30 AM »
Walnut media blasting is the way to go for surface prep.  My father in law own a body shop and used a plastic bumper primer on all of my interior panels, and a light coat of auto paint which was matched to my headligner and sail panels perfectly.  Fo some reason, I have a white interior and every white panel I have found has crumbled due UV.  I had to use and interior from a black car so coverage and duribility was important.  My panels were painted 14 years ago (before you could buy aftermarket panels) and I still do not have a chip.  The negative side was some of the grain was filled.  My dealings with the SEM on a friends car was good... It just took many, many coats to turn a black panel to white and I couldn't match the rest of the interior.