IH2LOSE said:
John.
Besides the sanding of the gel coat, Looks like your on the down hill slope with car now.
Are all of the suspention parts allready polished ?
Now I have to ask you why you chose the gel goal on this car over the slick sand especially when we all know whats in store with sanding the car.
Larry,
I will use Slicksand after I sand the gelcoat. It is my opinion that there is nothing that is better to use over bare glass and repairs than Gelcoat. Silcksand is made from exactly the same resin as gelcoat, but is has a lot of inert material in it to make the sanding easy. While that makes it a good primer/surfacer, it does not make it a very good barrier coat over repairs and bare glass. PPG reccomends the use of gelcoat over all repairs, and Corvette Image will not warranty thier panels if you do not use it, and experience blisters.
In my opinion, there is nothing better to consolidate the hundreds of tiny little spiderweb cracks, and it does a great job of blocking solvent penetration into repairs and bare glass. This is usually where blisters originate from, the solvent penetrates into the porus body filler and old glass, and the the top surface cures. The first time the car goes out in the hot sun, the solvent bakes out of the body and causes blisters. The gelcoat will stop these solvents from penetrating beneath it.
Almost everything we use on these old cars is excatly the same material. Resin, Gelcoat, body filler, dura-glass, bonding adhesive, Slicksand, and Featherfill, are all just Polyester resin, and only differ by the ammount of inert material they contain to aid in workability or sandability. The Gelcoat is nothing but pure resin with a little color in it, and some wax that forms a cure membrane after spraying. It is about as hard and impervious as you can get with polyester resin. This makes it a little hard to sand, and is a reason that a lot of shops don't use it. It is more labor intensive, and for a guy paying for a paint job, it adds up to a considerable upcharge, but for me it is nothing but a little material cost and a lot of labor, which costs me nothing!
The suspension parts are all polished and have been powdercoated with a chrome-look powder coat. they are not quite as drop-dead shiney as the polished ones on the 59, but the powdercoat ought to make them extremely durable. As soon as all the stainless bolts arrive, I will start bolting it al together. It is a long way from being done, and will probably not see the road until next spring.
Regards, John McGraw