09-21-2011, 04:19 PM
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#7 (permalink)
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Junior Member
Join Date: Sep 2011
Location: Massachusetts
Posts: 23
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Me personally I would never pain an automobile with any type of brush. I have painted quite a few cars in my time (auto body was my major at a vocational high school way back when) and painting with a brush will only look great if you are prepared to put in a lot of sweat and hard work to get it to look really nice. The good thing is if you go this route is that you will get a good work out on building arm muscle. 
Originally (early model T's and many others) before the spray gun they used to paint cars by brush but that was a painstaking method. You would have some couple of guys painting the cars by brush (any color as long as it was black) then after the paint cured they would sand it smooth by hand then it went on to another step where a few other guys would then hand polish the paint to a high luster shine. It looked great but the amount of work needed was tremendous. Good thing labor was cheap back then.
Go to harbor freight pick up a cheap spray gun for about $30 and an air compressor (make sure it will supply enough air for the spray gun you buy). It will look a lot better and take a lot less time to see the final results.
Paint is what is expensive, and don't forget the clear coat (for most cars) and if you are painting rubber or plastic (i.e bumpers) you have to add a polyurethane additive to the paint so it can flex and not crack.
Last edited by joeNmass; 09-21-2011 at 04:23 PM.
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