Friday, August 21, 2020

And on the Bumper Front.....or is that "Front Bumper"?

 Been sanding away on the first "skim coat" of the Bumper Bite flexible glaze, and I've already learned two things.

1- Go easy on the amount of hardener used

and

2- Let it cure for a good hour before hitting it with sandpaper

 

I learned #1 on the first batch I mixed. The excess hardener gave me a pot life of about 3 minutes, and the stuff kicked so hard and so fast that the spreader I was using got stuck to the bumper! It quite literally "froze" as I was wiping it on.


I learned #2 trying to clean up the mess I made learning #1.


Forgot to snap pix of the skim coat and sanding as I was busy cleaning it off, wiping it down with solvent, and shaking the can of primer, which I used tonight for the first time. You really have to put this stuff down in "Medium WET" coats to get any coverage.


And this is why we prime things:



These are all flaws I missed. I could kinda-sorta feel them with my fingers, but I couldn't see them due to all the different colors of plastic, paint, and filler resin. They just disappeared into the visual "noise" of the random splotches of color, so while I could barely feel them, I couldn't see how deep they were.

These are shallow enough that the Bumper Bite should fill them, and it's MUCH easier to sand than the repair resin.


SO......after the primer fully cures, I'll carefully mix up some more Bumper Bite, and wipe a coat into all these sunken areas. Let it sit 30~45 minutes, and it sands off pretty easily, like a "lightweight" polyester filler.


More to come.....

6 comments:

  1. I have been following this restoration with great interest. I'd have been surprised if you didn't come up with new skill sets here and there while you performed surgery. Keep up the good work. It will all be worth it.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. It's been both a learning and a patience exercising project. I like to do things "One-And-Done", and having to redo this several times has definitely "exercised" my patience!

      Delete
  2. As LL said above, this is interesting and I'm learning a lot.
    My last experience with any sort of body work was in the early eighties. Our '73 Datsun pickup was rusting heavily and I'd used some welding blanket cloth and a fiberglass kit to keep the water from splashing up through the holes in the cab floor.
    Thank goodness there aren't any photos because it was an ugly repair.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Likewise the floor of my 1986 Mighty Max. Ugly, but it worked.

      Delete
    2. BTDT, John! Sometimes "expedient repairs" are all that's required. A friend of mine had a 1971 Vega that had rusted out at the top of the dash on the inside of the car. He just just to pack paper towels in the gap and change them when they got really nasty looking.

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  3. I've used old road signs for big holes, and sections of beer cans for smaller spots, along with silicone sealer and/or epoxy. Ugly as sin, but watertight!

    ReplyDelete

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