I reached my level of incompetence. I know most of my work on the boat...or my house for that matter is better than what the average joe could do, but certainly not up to some of the work I've seen from others on this site.
Over the last 2 weeks I have repainted by stern to remove the old name and put the new one on.
I sanded the stern as the old lettering was painted on. I progressively went up to 320 grit. 3 coats of primer, sanding after each up to 320 grit.
I used Interlux Brightside Maroon. I prepped everything per everything I've read including Mainsails very well written piece on this site (I think)
I used a fine foam roller and tipped after. The first coat sucked. So after it dried enough, I sanded and repainted. The second coat sucked, so I sanded again.
The third coat wasn't as bad, but the tipping left marks. Which means I either didn't thin enough. ( actually I didn't thin at all) It was shiny through the wavy lines and it wouldn't have been noticable unless you were close. But it was bothering me.
So I reread everything again. It was a nice 75 degree day. I started in the late morning, no humidity, no wind, out of the sun. I thinned and it really seemed lke I had it going.
Unfortunately, I think I screwed myself with the tipping again. I just know if I try again, it will be the same result.
So here is my question.
Can I sand the painting I have done with 1000 - 2000 grit wetpaper. Then use 3m buffing compund with a buffer to bring out the 'shinyness'?
How many days should I wait, if this will fix my work?
Is there a difference between regular 3M Buffing compound and 3M Marine Buffing compound? (other than the price)
I know this would be more work that actually trying to repaint, but the weather isn't expected to cooperate this week and it's only the stern, so it isn't a huge job.
Am I screwed or can I salvage a bad situation?
Thanks
Chris
Over the last 2 weeks I have repainted by stern to remove the old name and put the new one on.
I sanded the stern as the old lettering was painted on. I progressively went up to 320 grit. 3 coats of primer, sanding after each up to 320 grit.
I used Interlux Brightside Maroon. I prepped everything per everything I've read including Mainsails very well written piece on this site (I think)
I used a fine foam roller and tipped after. The first coat sucked. So after it dried enough, I sanded and repainted. The second coat sucked, so I sanded again.
The third coat wasn't as bad, but the tipping left marks. Which means I either didn't thin enough. ( actually I didn't thin at all) It was shiny through the wavy lines and it wouldn't have been noticable unless you were close. But it was bothering me.
So I reread everything again. It was a nice 75 degree day. I started in the late morning, no humidity, no wind, out of the sun. I thinned and it really seemed lke I had it going.
Unfortunately, I think I screwed myself with the tipping again. I just know if I try again, it will be the same result.
So here is my question.
Can I sand the painting I have done with 1000 - 2000 grit wetpaper. Then use 3m buffing compund with a buffer to bring out the 'shinyness'?
How many days should I wait, if this will fix my work?
Is there a difference between regular 3M Buffing compound and 3M Marine Buffing compound? (other than the price)
I know this would be more work that actually trying to repaint, but the weather isn't expected to cooperate this week and it's only the stern, so it isn't a huge job.
Am I screwed or can I salvage a bad situation?
Thanks
Chris