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Ah that explains that 30k rhino lined craigslist ad "makes the truck sound quieter"...
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Carc is a good base for painting if it is clean and lightly wet sanded. I used Gillespie red and black in spray cans followed by the color. Do not expect a perfect match since the CARC will be faded. I degreased using Dawn soap and rinsed well. The texture will be rougher if it is hot and in the sun; smoother if in the shade and cooler. Try some test areas and see what matches the existing texture. Motor pool touch up can vary widely!I have some bare spots with aluminum showing next to areas with multilple layers of green and tan CARC. What is the best way to prep and paint these areas? Also what primer is recommended and can the primer be sprayed on top of the CARC?
Do you have a link to any of the nylon wheels for the grinder as I have not been able to find any locally?Use a Nylon Wheel on a grinder. That helps keep the rivets from being flatened. We have done 4 now that way with excellent results!
The newer voc hap free stuff that's coming out now is safer than the stuff they used to spray these with. Yes, use a jump suit, use a full face resarator, use gloves and a vacuum attachment when removing the old CARC, a lot of that older stuff (and some of the older typse of the new stuff) has chromium, lead, etc... nasty stuff.I have a full face respirator but not one that has a fresh air hose hooked into it. I might look into different paint options beside CARC since it is apparently more dangerous than its worth
Yes, pressure washing was the first thing I tried followed by nylon wheel, chemical stripping, and pad sanding. I am going to try a different aircraft stripper or try to find some Carc specific stripper next, but if that doesn't work I was wondering if soda blasting was a good option.Just curious, but have you tried just hitting it hard with a pressure washer? It'll certainly knock loose paint off and should do so without affecting what's adhered good.
A Rhino liner or a Line-X coating is definitely not the worst thing you can do actually it's one of the better things that you can do to these. This is a military Humvee it's probably going to be used off road in rough areas and this stuff will stand up to the rough environments it'll be exposed to. I personally use a specialized rubber coating it's similar to Line-X but we chemically engineer our own and it's one of the most flexible tough liners that you can use. It significantly reduces noise and vibrations that you'll get from these Humvee trust me it quiets then down a bunch. Using a regular car paint on these Humvee isn't something that will typically last too terribly long without cracking your flaking off and having issues simply because of how these things are built and riveted together. There's a lot of vibration because they're riveted together so when you use regular paint over time the vibration will chip paint off. I've assisted with many of these Humvee in disassembling them doing the body work repainting them and/or rubber coating them and I prefer the rubber coating any day over paint. You can still paint over the rubber coat and paint it whatever color you desire but it will not chip off as easy because there's a barrier between the hard metal and the paint the allows the paint to have a cushion so it resists cracking and flaking off.worst thing you can do...IMHO
A Rhino liner or a Line-X coating is definitely not the worst thing you can do actually it's one of the better things that you can do to these. This is a military Humvee it's probably going to be used off road in rough areas and this stuff will stand up to the rough environments it'll be exposed to. I personally use a specialized rubber coating it's similar to Line-X but we chemically engineer our own and it's one of the most flexible tough liners that you can use. It significantly reduces noise and vibrations that you'll get from these Humvee trust me it quiets then down a bunch. Using a regular car paint on these Humvee isn't something that will typically last too terribly long without cracking your flaking off and having issues simply because of how these things are built and riveted together. There's a lot of vibration because they're riveted together so when you use regular paint over time the vibration will chip paint off. I've assisted with many of these Humvee in disassembling them doing the body work repainting them and/or rubber coating them and I prefer the rubber coating any day over paint. You can still paint over the rubber coat and paint it whatever color you desire but it will not chip off as easy because there's a barrier between the hard metal and the paint the allows the paint to have a cushion so it resists cracking and flaking off.
let me add, we only use epoxy primer "milspec" MIL-DTL-53022D, type 1FSRD, what happens to the look of the rivets when you use high build primer? Why don't you retreat with alodine after you strip that off? How long will it be until one of your workers gets cancer? You apply a coat of primer, then another if needed. Don't you sand the primer? I don't see lots of 1990's H1s with flaking paint.
I like original
The material that we used to code it is not Line-X or a bed liner it's a specialized rubber coating that has an insane bond strength not only this but there's no way for a water barrier to get between the rubber coating and the body because of how it works. Good prep work is essential to have a good rubber coating or paint job. We also use respirators when we sand, primer and paint them. Not very many places use the type of coding that we have and not only that but we chemically reengineered ours so it's a tougher coating, we can change the hardness of it as well. It's specially formulated to bond to materials that are subjected to high vibration. These Humvee have an aluminium body anyway so you don't have to worry about then rusting out on you but when it comes to coating the areas that are not aluminum is essential to do a proper prep work so you don't have any areas where water can get between the metal and the coating that is applied.I only speak from experience, I've stripped so many bad coating jobs I've lost count, the damage underneath has been and can be quite extensive due to water intrusion, poor prep mainly. 99% of folks pay a company to this or do it themselves. Painting Hmmwv's is the same as painting an airplane, aluminum...I will NOT sand blast, we only chemical strip at RWH....this leaves the "factory" alodine process unharmed. The CARC process done RIGHT is incredibly strong, it's a system, not just paint. The key to any good paint job is prep of substrate.
At RWH we are committed to maintaining govt, LE and privately owned mil vehicles in there original state, we pride ourselves on doing OEM type work, that's also required for the insurance claims we do on customer vehicles.
This is just my .02 cents....FWIW.
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