O
OMC
Hello Everyone,
This is my first post on the site, and Barry and the team have been great with text questions, but I want to throw this out and see if:
1. It is bad enough to worry about?
2. How in the heck to fix it?
Here is he run down of what has happened so far. 63 Thunderbird stripped to bare metal.
Coated with SPI Epoxy Primer, 3 solid wet coats.
Small amounts of body filler (Evercoat Quantum one) block sanded.
Sealed again with Epoxy Primer
Countless numbers of coats of SPI 2K Regular Build Primer
Block sanded, block sanded, and block sanded countless numbers of times with 120, 220, 320, with soft sanders and 600 by machine (guide coat used in every grit), need to go to 800 before color. One gallon already on and mostly on the floor.
98 % of the body looks great when I wet sand and use 6 foot fluorescent lights. As with Newtons law, a spot always shows up that I am not happy with. The real issue is what is happening in the pictures below. The guide coat never shows a low spot and I have tried a 1 foot board and a 2 foot board. Any help is greatly appreciated, I just know that I have sprayed and sanded this spot 4 times in the last 2 days and it is not getting any better. The real problem area is in the # 2 pic, just below the body line.
This is my first post on the site, and Barry and the team have been great with text questions, but I want to throw this out and see if:
1. It is bad enough to worry about?
2. How in the heck to fix it?
Here is he run down of what has happened so far. 63 Thunderbird stripped to bare metal.
Coated with SPI Epoxy Primer, 3 solid wet coats.
Small amounts of body filler (Evercoat Quantum one) block sanded.
Sealed again with Epoxy Primer
Countless numbers of coats of SPI 2K Regular Build Primer
Block sanded, block sanded, and block sanded countless numbers of times with 120, 220, 320, with soft sanders and 600 by machine (guide coat used in every grit), need to go to 800 before color. One gallon already on and mostly on the floor.
98 % of the body looks great when I wet sand and use 6 foot fluorescent lights. As with Newtons law, a spot always shows up that I am not happy with. The real issue is what is happening in the pictures below. The guide coat never shows a low spot and I have tried a 1 foot board and a 2 foot board. Any help is greatly appreciated, I just know that I have sprayed and sanded this spot 4 times in the last 2 days and it is not getting any better. The real problem area is in the # 2 pic, just below the body line.