Grit dog
Full Access Member
- Joined
- May 18, 2020
- Posts
- 9,429
- Reaction score
- 17,285
- Location
- The Right side of Washington
- First Name
- Todd
- Truck Year
- 1986, 1977
- Truck Model
- K20, C10
- Engine Size
- 454, 350
@Woodman77
That’s a shame as it looks like someone did a very decent job repainting it at some point.
Unfortunately there’s no way to “fix” what’s there without removing it completely and starting over.
After that much effort on the affected panels or areas, even if you could color match, stay above the trim line, etc, you can’t trust what’s left on the rest of the vehicle imo.
Nice part is, if it’s all as straight and clean as those pics, it’s more than just a scuff n squirt but if it is not peeling up base coat after however many years old that paint job is, you don’t have to go all the way down to bare metal.
Like @Sad Sack said, the prep is easy and basic but just a lot of effort.
Start with the quickest methods like pressure washing. Followed by scraping, imo. You might be able to peel a lot of it off with a razor blade. Tedious but cleaner and imo less effort than breaking out the heavy sanding tools. Whatever don’t come off by those 2 means gets the sander! By spend few min testing how aggressive (quicker removal) you want to start with vs how easy it is to get to primer or base coat stage (320-400 grit).
You can remove paint quickly and end up spending more time and effort erasing deep sand scratches (60-100grit scratches) than it takes to not be as aggressive in the first place.
At this point you could do all the paint prep and then take it somewhere to be masked and sprayed.
That’s a shame as it looks like someone did a very decent job repainting it at some point.
Unfortunately there’s no way to “fix” what’s there without removing it completely and starting over.
After that much effort on the affected panels or areas, even if you could color match, stay above the trim line, etc, you can’t trust what’s left on the rest of the vehicle imo.
Nice part is, if it’s all as straight and clean as those pics, it’s more than just a scuff n squirt but if it is not peeling up base coat after however many years old that paint job is, you don’t have to go all the way down to bare metal.
Like @Sad Sack said, the prep is easy and basic but just a lot of effort.
Start with the quickest methods like pressure washing. Followed by scraping, imo. You might be able to peel a lot of it off with a razor blade. Tedious but cleaner and imo less effort than breaking out the heavy sanding tools. Whatever don’t come off by those 2 means gets the sander! By spend few min testing how aggressive (quicker removal) you want to start with vs how easy it is to get to primer or base coat stage (320-400 grit).
You can remove paint quickly and end up spending more time and effort erasing deep sand scratches (60-100grit scratches) than it takes to not be as aggressive in the first place.
At this point you could do all the paint prep and then take it somewhere to be masked and sprayed.