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-   -   primer help (https://www.cherokeeforum.com/f53/primer-help-18371/)

JEFF+1990JEEPCHEROKEE 06-16-2009 09:48 PM

primer help
 
i need to know how much primer is at wal mart i need the cheapist kind.

72gremlinkid 06-17-2009 06:45 PM

... Walmart out of driving range by you? Theres one every ten miles here.. Wouldnt imagine it being too much

ZeroCherokee 06-20-2009 12:32 AM

But since I just bought some, it's a little under 5 bucks for a good sized can.

5-90 06-20-2009 01:53 AM

Coming from someone who used to do paint prep for a living in a body shop, there are only a couple of reasons I can think of to need actual primer -

1) The paint job you're wanting to cover is defective, and needs to be stripped down to bare metal.

2) You're trying to cover a dark paint job with a light colour, and need to strip it down.

Generally speaking, if you're painting something that's already been painted you just use fine paper to strip the clearcoat and break the gloss on the colour coat, and use that for your primer. You might need a can as a "guide coat" for sanding down filled areas, but that's about it. If you knock it down to bare metal, you've gone too far.

Unless there's something seriously wrong, the factory paint job is probably the best primer coat you could hope to get!

ol"blue 06-20-2009 10:59 AM

That's very good advice sir. More people should follow it.:cheers:

Schmoozer 06-20-2009 09:43 PM


Originally Posted by JEFF+1990JEEPCHEROKEE (Post 209360)
i need to know how much primer is at wal mart i need the cheapist kind.

1) What are you doing? We may able to help (like 5-90 did).

2) If you go cheap $2-$3....

5-90 06-20-2009 10:33 PM


Originally Posted by ol"blue (Post 211616)
That's very good advice sir. More people should follow it.:cheers:

It derives from two basic principles:

1) Don't do work you don't have to. Unless there's something wrong with the paint job, you don't have to strip down to bare metal.

2) Don't waste good work that someone else did. The OEMs use a decent quality of paint (except for the late 1980's, when they were getting the hang of the two-part Urethane mixes,) and universally a good primer, so why waste it?

As I said, you'd have trouble covering a darker colour with a lighter one - but even that can be mitigated somewhat, usually by going a bit lighter on coats and building them up more.


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