I'm in the process of restoring a 1953 MG TD. I'm almost finished painting. All fenders, doors, hood, gas tank etc. are off the tub and all pieces are being done separately. I've used acrylic enamel with hardner throughout. I have a couple of runs on the gas tank and some scatered orange peel on other panels. Paint is fresh, some a week old, some a few days.
As a background, MG's of this era had very marginal paint to begin with. All was enamal, not hi gloss, semi gloss at best. The color is British Racing Green.
I plan to wet sand the runs with some 1000 followed by 3000 to smooth things out. I plan to sand the orange peel with 3000 where possible and if required, 2000 then 3000.
I plan to purchase a Porter Cable 7424 to work the panels. I'll start with M105 and not sure if I should use a 7207 or 8207 pad. I'll do all panels individually this way then depending on how things look, may follow up with M205 and a 9207 pad. Remember, I don't want too much gloss on this car. The body panels on these cars were hand formed over wooden frames so they are not necessarily consistent or perfect. And as stated, the original type paints were not that glossy.
I've done a lot of reading on this site and this seems like a good start. Being able to take each body panel and place it on a bench and work it at a good hieght and angle will be nice.
Does this sound like a pretty good plan or am I missing something?
Would appreciate any feedback from the experts.
Thanks in advance for your help
As a background, MG's of this era had very marginal paint to begin with. All was enamal, not hi gloss, semi gloss at best. The color is British Racing Green.
I plan to wet sand the runs with some 1000 followed by 3000 to smooth things out. I plan to sand the orange peel with 3000 where possible and if required, 2000 then 3000.
I plan to purchase a Porter Cable 7424 to work the panels. I'll start with M105 and not sure if I should use a 7207 or 8207 pad. I'll do all panels individually this way then depending on how things look, may follow up with M205 and a 9207 pad. Remember, I don't want too much gloss on this car. The body panels on these cars were hand formed over wooden frames so they are not necessarily consistent or perfect. And as stated, the original type paints were not that glossy.
I've done a lot of reading on this site and this seems like a good start. Being able to take each body panel and place it on a bench and work it at a good hieght and angle will be nice.
Does this sound like a pretty good plan or am I missing something?
Would appreciate any feedback from the experts.
Thanks in advance for your help
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