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#1
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want to start to restore my front grilles
just about to get on my front grills on my 72 formula . looking at a bunch of photos ,looks like they were not blacked out
and what paint is correct |
#2
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Argent Silver, same as used on the Honeys and the rally wheels. Here is a nice shot of Mikes car. I saw this at MACN and its super nice.
1 of like 40 threads on the subject.. https://forums.maxperformanceinc.com...ht=grill+color
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"The Future Belongs to those who are STILL Willing to get their Hands Dirty" .. my Grandfather Last edited by Formulabruce; 02-28-2023 at 03:00 AM. |
#3
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#4
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i repainted my 72 grilles with eastwood brand argent silver in a spray can, goes on nice & smooth and is the right color.
didnt the honeycomb wheels have a texture to it? the OER brand wheel paints definitely have a slightly coarse texture to it that looks correct for honey wheels but would be too rough for the grilles IMO. not sure what was used from teh factory but my grilles were smooth silver when i redid them. |
#5
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Texture is in the rubber, Not the paint. Many folks get them too smooth, then look to get texture in the paint. Appearance was intended to be a rough cast Aluminum..
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"The Future Belongs to those who are STILL Willing to get their Hands Dirty" .. my Grandfather |
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#6
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yes the rubber on honeys has texture, but the OER simulated magnesium wheel paint i mentioned has some texture to it too. probably not the best spray can option compared to the smooth eastwood argent paint i used for the grilles.
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#7
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Wouldn't it have to be paint of a plastic type and would it work on a '74 girll?
Also wondering what you doing for prep. |
#8
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The eastwood paint works great on plastics, dont thinks its a specific plastic/vinyl paint like SEM for interiors is, but it goes on great and is very durable. prep is key to a good looking and lasting paint job.
for prepping most parts and the grilles i just clean them real good first with dish soap & warm water, then a final wipe with rubbing alcohol. lightly sand/scuff everything to get a smooth uniform finish, i use scotch brite pads to scuff a smooth surface or 400-600 grit sand paper to feather edge rough areas, then spray 1-2 coats of primer & smooth if needed, then paint in 2-3 light to medium wet coats with some time in between each coat, but follow the cans instructions if they differ much for the coats. |
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#9
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