Excellent work! Any tips for a person that has never painted before? I'd like to paint mine myself in my garage but I'm a little bit afraid of making a huge mess. What kind of equipment are you using?
Thanks! This was my first time too. Don't be afraid, it's doable. The hard part is actually the lead up to painting, all the body work to make the panels straight. I spent 6 months just blocking and prepping panels - I usually put a couple hours in each night, more on the weekends. Not every night but most. Here are a few tips I can pass on:
Equipment -
Air compressor is critical, min 60 gal tank and 5hp, good CFM rating, 15-18 I would say. And a good air dryer min 25ft away from the compressor
air tools - 6" DA sander, air file, jitter bug, ...
Paint guns - get the three gun system! Primer gun, top coat gun, detail (small) gun. I chose devilbliss starting line - very happy, great price and great guns.
Blocking kit - dura block is what used and 'soft sanders' is another branding kit I highly recommend
Rotisserie or hoist if you are doing metal/body work under the car
Strong and stable saw horses for blocking panels off the car
Large orbital polisher, 8-10 inch wheel, for the cut buff and polish
And all the usual tools to pull the car/panels apart.
Materials -
I sorely underestimated the amount of sandpaper and hi build primer I needed.
Part of this I'm sure is my inexperience in blocking panels, likely use less on the next car.
Choose a good quality paint system and use the whole system - epoxy primer, hi build primer, top coat. I decided to use eurothane because of my research it should be more user friendly - and I have to say it's great paint. I chose DuPont nason products, see below for pictures.
Get good quality filler, it'll make your life easier, and get a very good quality polyester finishing 2 part filler, key for the final stages of blocking.
General tips -
The Internet is your friend ... I learned from reading and watching videos. I watched everything from Kevin tetz, YouTube and paintucation - huge help for me. Like how to block a panel.
Get a test panel and practice! I did this to start and it built my confidence.
Patience ... Patience ... Patience ... There were times where I lost mine, it's very tedious to get panels just right. But it's what makes the paint job turn out.
I'm sure I'm missing some stuff but it's a start. Let me know if I can help more.