NOTE: The following threads were split from another thread and were separated so that discussion could be continued and not take the other threads focus away in a different or multiple directions
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I'm in California. Almost all the paint today is single stage which is not what was originally used. I know of a several cars that were sent to other states to be painted.
Are you sure about this? I thought almost all modern paints are base coat/clear coat, not single stage, which was what was used in the factory at the time.
Yeah. It's the other way around. Single stage was a paint process used on almost all cars companies in the 60s, 70s and 80s. California smog laws made it illegal here. Two stage, the base and clear coat, are what is used today. I don't know what other states' regulations are.
The painting "trick" to remember
and do in this day and age to be acceptable to MCA rules, is to have who ever paints your car to "create" some "orange peel" on the car. Painters like to sand it out. Tell them NO. For a Fastback, the best place to "show" orange peel is on the roof along side the rear window above the vents on a 65. A 3 x 3 inch patch should be enough to satisfy judges. Hardtops "orange peel" places are sort of in the same place, but behind the rear window on the vertical panel. Convertibles are best displayed on the piece in front of the trunk lid, behind the chrome strip for the top. Do both sides in any case.
Jim