WhyteWizard
New member
I've been thinking of a way to standardize demonstrations of the various products and techniques.
There's no doubt there are a lot of guys here who get really good results using a pretty wide variety of tools, materials, and technique, so, how can we assess the various strengths and weakness' of the different styles?
Here's what I've come up with so far and I'm hoping some other people will contribute.
First, we need a test panel that's reproducible. There are metal supply places all over the country and I'm pretty sure most of them have off the shelf sizes of sheet metal that are within square inches of each other.
Next, we need to have a standard primer, base-coat, clear-coat that's both cheap enough for people to afford it and at the same time polishes nicely.
Then, we need a standardized scratch pattern. To that end, I think machine sanding wet is better than dry sanding because wet sanding doesn't create the infamous pigtails of the recent challenge.
From that point on, the same size panel, same paint, same scratch pattern, it's up to each of us to decide how to handle the situation. The point would be to show how each of us gets the results we get and how long it might take us each to get there. Obviously, a panel isn't a car, it doesn't have the same challenges, the inside and outside curves, right angles, moldings, tight spots, etc. but at least it would give us a starting point.
Then, I think the panel should be well lit, and the process should be shown in one continuous shot from start to finish up to and including wiping off the excess material and a final wipe with solvent or IPA. You can decide if you want to count the cleanup time or not as far as comparisons are concerned. If the people want to share what they use, that's up to them, but in any case it has to be understood up front that none of us are representing anything unless are authorized to do so. I doubt seriously that many manufacturers are going to be excited about this sort of thing because there are still too many variables involved. I can tell you right now, I'll probably keep my own council on that part.
I hope this will be a good starting point and others will make suggestions to move the process forward.
Robert
There's no doubt there are a lot of guys here who get really good results using a pretty wide variety of tools, materials, and technique, so, how can we assess the various strengths and weakness' of the different styles?
Here's what I've come up with so far and I'm hoping some other people will contribute.
First, we need a test panel that's reproducible. There are metal supply places all over the country and I'm pretty sure most of them have off the shelf sizes of sheet metal that are within square inches of each other.
Next, we need to have a standard primer, base-coat, clear-coat that's both cheap enough for people to afford it and at the same time polishes nicely.
Then, we need a standardized scratch pattern. To that end, I think machine sanding wet is better than dry sanding because wet sanding doesn't create the infamous pigtails of the recent challenge.
From that point on, the same size panel, same paint, same scratch pattern, it's up to each of us to decide how to handle the situation. The point would be to show how each of us gets the results we get and how long it might take us each to get there. Obviously, a panel isn't a car, it doesn't have the same challenges, the inside and outside curves, right angles, moldings, tight spots, etc. but at least it would give us a starting point.
Then, I think the panel should be well lit, and the process should be shown in one continuous shot from start to finish up to and including wiping off the excess material and a final wipe with solvent or IPA. You can decide if you want to count the cleanup time or not as far as comparisons are concerned. If the people want to share what they use, that's up to them, but in any case it has to be understood up front that none of us are representing anything unless are authorized to do so. I doubt seriously that many manufacturers are going to be excited about this sort of thing because there are still too many variables involved. I can tell you right now, I'll probably keep my own council on that part.
I hope this will be a good starting point and others will make suggestions to move the process forward.
Robert