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naumuk(at)alltel.net Guest
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Posted: Mon Jul 10, 2006 8:51 am Post subject: To paint or not to paint |
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All-
My question is, does flying an unpainted plane make it harder to paint later (Apart from just wanting to keep flying it)?
I'm sure I'm going to tweak something after flying it, and figure it's easier to do while the plane is green. Also, there are a couple of good aircraft painters who have their own hangars within a 50 mile radius. I'll probably wind up with a better job than I could do having them spray the primer and major color coats and just do the trim myself.
Incidentally, I heard from EAA about the article. A go no-go decision will have to wait until after Oshkosh.
Bill
do not archive
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larry(at)macsmachine.com Guest
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Posted: Mon Jul 10, 2006 11:13 am Post subject: To paint or not to paint |
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Bill,
I believe it's best to paint first, if you've got confidence in the work
you did. It seems that when flying, you accumulate a greasy smog from
the air
and soot on the underbelly while flying and adjusting the carbs. Bugs
and birds do their thing really well too. Even when you clean the plane
regularly,
it's always a surprise how much crud and stuff has accumulated between
the jointed parts. One of the reasons I believe you add 100 hours or more
in exchange for flying it for a year or more before paint. There are
chemicals to clean the stuff, but you've got a lot of riveted seams in
the plane that
will also have oil and grease, etc packed between them which makes it a
doubly difficult job to do after the fact. I've been in paint mode
since starting
the booth in April and so far, only the small parts, are painted, tail
feathers are in prime and the wings and fuselage are still in the
hangar. It's fussy work
but I was forewarned. Hope to fly again sometime near September.
Larry McFarland - 601HDS at www.macsmachine.com
do not archive
Bill Naumuk wrote:
Quote: | All-
My question is, does flying an unpainted plane make it harder to
paint later (Apart from just wanting to keep flying it)?
I'm sure I'm going to tweak something after flying it, and figure
it's easier to do while the plane is green. Also, there are a couple
of good aircraft painters who have their own hangars within a 50 mile
radius. I'll probably wind up with a better job than I could do having
them spray the primer and major color coats and just do the trim myself.
Incidentally, I heard from EAA about the article. A go no-go
decision will have to wait until after Oshkosh.
Bill
do not archive
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mtherr(at)yahoo.com Guest
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Posted: Mon Jul 10, 2006 1:16 pm Post subject: To paint or not to paint |
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Not sure I my message will be a repeat (I took time to
read only a few). But my personal experience is that
if it is not painted before flying, chances are it
will spend years before being painted.
I find myself not ready to stop flying to do the
painting job. I fly almost every week since the plane
is in operation and I don't have the motivation to
take it appart and stop flying for a month to do the
paint job.
This winter, when I upgrade the engine, maybe I will
paint it, depending on timing (if nice spring days
coincide with engine installation done, no paint!).
Michel
do not archive
----------------------------
Michel Therrien CH601-HD, C-GZGQ
http://mthobby.pcperfect.com/ch601
http://www.zenithair.com/bldrlist/profiles/mthobby
http://pages.infinit.net/mthobby
__________________________________________________
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ggower_99(at)yahoo.com Guest
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Posted: Thu Jul 13, 2006 12:00 pm Post subject: To paint or not to paint |
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I think that if one builder decides to fly first and paint later, the best second option will be to polish the metal, some part every week end and add some trim, Yes I know, lots of cleaning and repolishing later, but will be a beautiful airplane.
Just a thought.
Saludos
Gary Gower
do not archive.
LarryMcFarland <larry(at)macsmachine.com> wrote:
Quote: | --> Zenith-List message posted by: LarryMcFarland
Bill,
I believe it's best to paint first, if you've got confidence in the work
you did. It seems that when flying, you accumulate a greasy smog from
the air
and soot on the underbelly while flying and adjusting the carbs. Bugs
and birds do their thing really well too. Even when you clean the plane
regularly,
it's always a surprise how much crud and stuff has accumulated between
the jointed parts. One of the reasons I believe you add 100 hours or more
in exchange for flying it for a year or more before paint. There are
chemicals to clean the stuff, but you've got a lot of riveted seams in
the plane that
will also have oil and grease, etc packed between them which makes it a
doubly difficult job to do after the fact. I've been in paint mode
since starting
the booth in April and so far, only the small parts, are painted, tail
feathers are in prime and the wings and fuselage are still in the
hangar. It's fussy work
but I was forewarned. Hope to fly again sometime near September.
Larry McFarland - 601HDS at www.macsmachine.com
do not archive
Bill Naumuk wrote:
Quote: | All-
My question is, does flying an unpainted plane make it harder to
paint later (Apart from just wanting to keep flying it)?
I'm sure I'm going to tweak something after flying it, and figure
it's easier to do while the plane is green. Also, there are a couple
of good aircraft painters who have their own hangars within a 50 mile
radius. I'll probably wind up with a better job than I could do having
them spray the primer and major color coats and just do the trim myself.
Incidentally, I heard from EAA about the article. A go no-go
decision will have to wait until after Oshkosh.
Bill
do not archive
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naumuk(at)alltel.net Guest
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Posted: Fri Jul 14, 2006 6:01 am Post subject: To paint or not to paint |
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Gary-
I agree, it will be a beautiful plane- you don't have the expense of painting, and it will be lighter, but tt's a damned if you do, damned if you don't situation.
It reminds me of my uncle who had a Lyman wood boat. Absolutely gorgeous compared to the cookie cutter fiberglass boats, but he spent as much time stripping and revarnishing every year as he did water skiing.
I'm too lazy for that, and I'll be the first to admit that there are a couple of "Smileys" that can benefit from a couple of heavy coats of primer!
Bill
do not archive
[quote] ---
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Geoff Heap
Joined: 12 Jan 2006 Posts: 266 Location: Lindenwold, New Jersey
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Posted: Mon Jul 17, 2006 8:00 am Post subject: Re: To paint or not to paint |
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My 10 cents I started building (701) in 1991. Prior to assy of anything I would scotchbrite, alumprep, (alodine sometimes), and prime. My wings have been finished and stored for over 6 years and are painted on the outside (rag wiped) with zinc chromate (rattle can for all internal parts). I know that if I wipe this off to use a different primer I will have a nice shiny clean alum surface underneath. Over the years I have switched to Primers more compatible with modern finish paints. However, today I have the fuse nearly finished. wings, rudder, stab, flaperons and slats all finished and I don't have a single component that is not primed. I consider the inside finished except for the cabin area which I will finish paint. I'd die if I had to paint everything in one shot. I'm so used to painting as I go along now that it's just part of the building process. For me I believe that this is the way to go. By the way, most everything is different shades of grey right now and without a finish paint job it looks quite nice compared to a bare metal job ........Geoff
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raymondj(at)frontiernet.n Guest
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Posted: Mon Jul 17, 2006 10:18 am Post subject: To paint or not to paint |
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Much of the discussion about paint or not seems to revolve around
appearance. I'm trying maximize my efficiency (be lazy) when it comes to the
finish. I understand the importance of corrosion protection, but I'm
wondering if there is some process out there that offers adequate
protection, though it may look bad, with less work than either paint or
polish.
Raymond Julian
Kettle River, MN.
Corvair core acquired
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bryanmmartin
Joined: 10 Jan 2006 Posts: 1018
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Posted: Mon Jul 17, 2006 11:49 am Post subject: To paint or not to paint |
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leave it as bare unpolished aluminum. Unless you live in a very
corrosive environment, it'll last longer than you will.
On Jul 17, 2006, at 2:16 PM, raymondj wrote:
[quote]
<raymondj(at)frontiernet.net>
Much of the discussion about paint or not seems to revolve around
appearance. I'm trying maximize my efficiency (be lazy) when it
comes to the
finish. I understand the importance of corrosion protection, but I'm
wondering if there is some process out there that offers adequate
protection, though it may look bad, with less work than either
paint or
polish.
Raymond Julian
Kettle River, MN.
Corvair core acquired
--
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_________________ --
Bryan Martin
N61BM, CH 601 XL, Stratus Subaru.
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john.marzulli(at)gmail.co Guest
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Posted: Mon Jul 17, 2006 6:32 pm Post subject: To paint or not to paint |
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Living up here in Seattle, I plan on painting for two reasons
1) Seattle is a highly corrosive environment ( physically, not socially ).
2) I'm spending a lot of money and a lot of time on a project that is a different type of plane, so why shouldn't I make it look different?
These planes are expressions of ourselves, so I'm choosing to give my bird a very unique paint scheme. I also like the look of shiny polished airplanes like Cessna 120/140s.
The point is the choice is yours, just like the panel you build up.
-John in Seattle
On 7/17/06, Bryan Martin <bryanmmartin(at)comcast.net (bryanmmartin(at)comcast.net)> wrote:[quote] --> Zenith-List message posted by: Bryan Martin <bryanmmartin(at)comcast.net (bryanmmartin(at)comcast.net)>
leave it as bare unpolished aluminum. Unless you live in a very
corrosive environment, it'll last longer than you will.
On Jul 17, 2006, at 2:16 PM, raymondj wrote:
[quote] --> Zenith-List message posted by: "raymondj"
<raymondj(at)frontiernet.net (raymondj(at)frontiernet.net)>
Much of the discussion about paint or not seems to revolve around
appearance. I'm trying maximize my efficiency (be lazy) when it
comes to the
finish. I understand the importance of corrosion protection, but I'm
wondering if there is some process out there that offers adequate
protection, though it may look bad, with less work than either
paint or
polish.
Raymond Julian
Kettle River, MN. http://701Builder.blogspot.com/
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