materials:
Duplicolor Vinyl & Fabric or Plasti-Kote Vinyl Color (the two are nearly identical)
Bulldog adhesion promoter
rubbing alcohol or Prepsol
assorted sand paper 400g or 600g
*note: this type of paint prep is only relevent to vinyl/plastic
i started by wiping the trim with rubbing alcohol. this removes grease, wax, and most silicones. if you have any of those on your trim, it will repel the paint and you will have defects such as ''fish eyes'' and ''orange peel''.
then i sanded with 600g sandpaper. the sanding gives the paint something to bite into. you want the scuffing to look as uniform as possible.
then, i went back over it again with the rubbing alcohol for further cleaning of contaminates and dust removal.
now comes the 1st coat of Bulldog adhesion promoter. this stuff helps paint stick to things like plastic and vinyl or anything that paint doesn't like to stick to. i've always sprayed a light mist when using this product because you don't want to heavy of a coat.
you can spray the vinyl paint right over the Bulldog without sanding. for the vinyl paint i applied 3 coats per piece. you can re-coat every 5 mins or so because it drys very fast.
the reasons i chose the vinyl paint is because of its characteristics.
- single stage paint that doesn't need a clear coat (but you can if you want).
- responds well to polishes and wax (wait about a month).
- it touches up the best out of any other type of paint i've used. unless you damaged the trim with a deep scratch, you can't tell it was touched up.
- it's pretty durable.
- fast drying
- and finally it was made for vinyl/plastic/rubber, which s what the trims are made from.
here are some pics of what gloss black looks like:
i'll take more pics of it in the sun. later.
Duplicolor Vinyl & Fabric or Plasti-Kote Vinyl Color (the two are nearly identical)
Bulldog adhesion promoter
rubbing alcohol or Prepsol
assorted sand paper 400g or 600g
*note: this type of paint prep is only relevent to vinyl/plastic
i started by wiping the trim with rubbing alcohol. this removes grease, wax, and most silicones. if you have any of those on your trim, it will repel the paint and you will have defects such as ''fish eyes'' and ''orange peel''.
then i sanded with 600g sandpaper. the sanding gives the paint something to bite into. you want the scuffing to look as uniform as possible.
then, i went back over it again with the rubbing alcohol for further cleaning of contaminates and dust removal.
now comes the 1st coat of Bulldog adhesion promoter. this stuff helps paint stick to things like plastic and vinyl or anything that paint doesn't like to stick to. i've always sprayed a light mist when using this product because you don't want to heavy of a coat.
you can spray the vinyl paint right over the Bulldog without sanding. for the vinyl paint i applied 3 coats per piece. you can re-coat every 5 mins or so because it drys very fast.
the reasons i chose the vinyl paint is because of its characteristics.
- single stage paint that doesn't need a clear coat (but you can if you want).
- responds well to polishes and wax (wait about a month).
- it touches up the best out of any other type of paint i've used. unless you damaged the trim with a deep scratch, you can't tell it was touched up.
- it's pretty durable.
- fast drying
- and finally it was made for vinyl/plastic/rubber, which s what the trims are made from.
here are some pics of what gloss black looks like:
i'll take more pics of it in the sun. later.
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