I have researched all of the posts on primer and painting and I just want to make sure I have it correct as the painting of my car will start shortly. So please comment and correct my assumptions. For a December 1965 Dearborn convertible 289 2V scheduled to be built on 12/27/65:
1.When the car left the body shop (doors, hood, front fenders and valence panels were not installed at this time) the first process was to hand spray red oxide primer over all bare metal surfaces except the floor pan which was sprayed mechanically with jets with glossy black from underneath. The red oxide application was uniform throughout the exterior panels, interior, trunk, engine compartment, and interior, while the floor pan had black paint drips because the spray was close to the floor pan and applied with pressure from the jets.
Correct as we understand the process though I would say that it was likely not black applied from below but a very dark batch color
Many sealer were applied before any primer sealers while others appear to be after. Don't know for sure which ones were one in what order on 66 Dearborn
cars of this time period
2. The interior panels that would be exposed after the car was built were painted: instrument panel, A-pillars, texture on interior of doors. These were then masked off to prevent exterior paint from being sprayed on them.
+1
3. Gray sealer/primer hand sprayed to the exterior panels and trunk that would receive the final top coat paint color. Some overspray would be found on the interior panels and engine compartment near the cowl area which were not masked off.
Some
gray primer overspray
may be found on the interior panels and engine compartment near the cowl area which were not masked off.
but none may be visible on finished painted car due to exterior color being applied over it 4. Sound deadener applied to the rear wheel wells and the inside of the rear quarter panels.
Can't confirm (doesn't make a difference in the finished product) if this step came before or after step #3 Also sealers and sound deadener appears to have been applied to the firewall sections visible in the front wheel well
5. Exterior paint hand sprayed to all exterior panels and the entire trunk area. This was a uniform application. There is overspray on to the black underbody almost to the driveshaft/transmission tunnel. The painter painted everything side to side and up and down so the rear wheel well black out would have been mostly covered. There was no effort to keep these areas "black."
After the gray primer application but before exterior color was applied the rear bumper guard brackets and rear valance was attached to the taillight panel with all mounting screws but left hanging (not attached at the bottom)
Depending on the time period workers crawled into the cars and applied body color into the interior panels and then the door jambs before starting on the exterior panels
Painter also "typically" applied body color forward of the cowl to at least the shock tower area on the top inner fender lip and in the front wheelwell
The application of paint to the rear wheelwell area produced a small narrow shadow around the outer edge of the wheel well from the quarter panel lip
An example from your cars time period
Q: But was there an effort to apply a uniform appli
cation of the exterior color paint to the interior sheet metal that was not masked off, or was this just overspray from the exterior panels?
No attempt was made to keep the rear wheel wells uncoated with exterior color
6. The rocker hem flange was spray painted flat to satin black prior to the front fenders being installed. There was overspray on to the gloss black underbody.
Nest step would have been the black engine compartment paint applied to the inner surfaces of the engine compartment, firewall visible from within, to the radiator support face and in many cases the inner fender panels forward of the shock towers. This edge was not masked and the amount of paint and the amount of overspray appears to be dependent on the particular painter, possibly their age, effort and height
After or before this stage the pinch weld was blacked out with a semi-gloss black paint applied from the outside inward producing overspray onto surfaces below the car that hung down or were visible from the side of the car as well as the floor panel directly behind the pinch weld. This process started at the front wheel well and normally continued to the rear edge of the quarter panels
7. The engine compartment was masked off and painted semi-gloss black. Both the interior panels of the engine compartment were painted as well as the outside of the inner fenders. At the firewall, there would be a transition as it went down to the transmission tunnel where the engine compartment black out may not have completely covered the area.
8. After the front fenders were installed and just prior to the wheel/tire assembly being installed, sound deadener was applied to the inner front fenders. The application would cover the outside of the inner fenders and the inside of the outer fenders. The spray would also be applied to the suspension components that "got in the way." That is, no effort was made to mask off these components.
Not all the cars got sound deadener applied to the back side of the fender (the tops) though some attempt was made to cover the splash shields where they meet the fenders and such
Appears to have been applied from below the car (like the rear wheelwells. Don't often see allot on suspension but at Dearborn every often see it on the spring covers something different than other plants in my experience
Do I have this process correct as to application and over spray? The painting will start soon! Thank you, Tom
Looks like it
Remember when painting things off the car (other body panels) the primer will be a different tone and the overspray from the exterior color application on the back side if some lightly (not full coverage or almost full) needs to make sense. Example back side of the where the headlight bucket will attach on a fender would have received a nice coat of paint where the painter painted the lip of the wheel opening. And the back/rear surface of the inside of the fender when the painter shot the rear edge of the fender so that onlu body color showed through when the door was open on the car and the driver or passenger looked forward
Have fun