I got to the body shop for a couple hours yesterday morning and painted the Wimbledon White base and clear on the rest of the parts that needed to be painted white. I wasn't sure that I had enough base left over from what I mixed last week to be able to get three good coats on all of the remaining parts. My first thought was to be cheap and go thin on the hood under the blackout area to save base coat, but decided I needed to do it right and just mix a few more parts of paint.
This brings the grand total to 3 1/4 gallons of base used to paint all of the sheet metal in and out with three good coats of base. These old gals are a lot thicker than they look, there's a lot of square footage to cover there. I just thought "the fricking hood alone is six feet long alone, no way I have enough paint" (except I didn't say fricking, lol). I was right, I would have run out if I hadn't mixed more. That would have been unfortunate, if I had to mix extra for the final color coat and then hope it matched the original paint mixed. Although it is the easiest paint formula I have ever mixed, (white base, 3g of black, 6g of red/orange and voila) I still didn't want to take any chances. I used the freshly mixed paint for the first coat and then I used the paint I mixed up last week with all of the other paint on the second and third coats to make sure paint matched the rest of the panels.
I wasn't able to move the parts off of the prep station and clean up yesterday, because the prep station can't really bake it like you can in the spray booth. I will still need to go back some time today and unmask and move the panels off of the prep station and sweep and clean up. I will post more pics of the panels unmasked after I do that.
Now that everything that is supposed to be white is white (I hope), I can install and align the doors and fenders over the next couple of weeks and then back in to the spray boot to paint the black on the bottom of the car and the front and rear valences. The hood black out will also need to be sprayed eventually. Depending on how long it takes to measure and lay out the stencil and then re-measure, twice, to make sure it is in the right place, I could probably knock that out on one of the Saturdays early. If it goes smoothly, I could then work on the doors and fenders, we will see how that all plays out. I was originally hoping to be done by this weekend, as next weekend is Memorial Day and the "official" start of summer. It will be hard to get time to go to the body shop then, my wife and I try to fill the weekends up pretty quick all summer with non-Mustang stuff.
I am going to try and squeeze out as much Mustang time in the next few week as I can, without pushing any limits. Hopefully I will be driving it by late June/July. The interior won't be completed but it should be a street legal car by then. After spending too many hours over Mother's day weekend (not actually Mother's Day,, but all day Saturday) painting the body panels, I have ruffled some feathers, the feathers that I prefer to stay un-ruffled, haha. I am going to lay a little low for the next few weeks and as they say, keep my *** low and try not get it shot off, lol.
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