Originally Posted by
WhyteWizard
OK, I think a glob of touch up paint to protect the basecoat where you burned through then the protector to cover the mess is the best way to go at this point.
Now that`s out of the way... Next time you want to deal with a chip I`d suggest this: Clean any wax or compound out of the chip with alcohol. If the basecoat is showing through, instead of using the basecoat touch up by itself then covering with clear, mix the base and clear together on a paper plate - three drops of base, two drops of clear - then add a couple of drops of slow lacquer thinner to the mix and stir.
Use a very fine tipped brush or one of the little daubers like the Griots touch up brushes to fill the chip with paint. Stay inside the chip and put enough so the paint fills the chip and leave a little high spot. When the lacquer thinner dries out the bump will dry more or less flush with the rest of the paint - then - walk away. Polishing over time will lay it down flatter as will just normal wear and tear. Lacquer is much softer than the current paints.
If you absolutely can`t stand it and have to sand it flat - then use a very hard block so the paper doesn`t role over the chip and wear through the existing paint around the chip and hit just the high spot. Then, polish with a foam pad - a wool pad will tend to pull the paint out of the chip once you disrupt the hard surface.
Robert
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