Latex paint (really!)
I have actually had very good luck with the new latex paint from Rodda. Before you laugh, hear me out. Having a rough time getting a custom color match in oil based paint, I asked a local industrial shop what they used, and they said they were basically forced into trying Latex. After trying several brands, they went with Rodda. All those Genie Lifts you see at construction sites are painted with Rodda latex. How good is it for vehicle paint? It's quite tough, actually. How well does it hold up to grease and diesel? Stunningly well, actually. In fact, being the slob I am, I spilled diesel all over the vehicle while fueling it up. It wiped right up and left literally no residue or discoloration. The reason for the new latex formulations is the EPA regulations on paint booths at industries. It costs many truckloads of dollars to outfit a paint booth to do oil based paints per EPA regs. By going with latex, it's infinitely easier/cheaper to do commercial painting. Applying it took some fiddling. Ended up with a HVLP sprayer from Harbor Freight for $20 and hot rodded it to run at more like 75psi and need to cut the paint with about 30% water and a little Flo-Trol. The other factor is rain. You need a few days to let it harden before any rain at all hits it. After that, it's tough as nails. Before that, it will bead up, discolor, and generally look nasty. That happened to me and I was horrified until the weather dried out and all the thousands/millions of bubbles in the paint pulled right back onto the vehicle and looked like nothing at all had ever happened. Weirdest thing I ever saw. All I did was take in a paint sample of an aircleaner or something and Rodda type matched it perfectly. About $30 a gallon or so. I'm sold on it. Cleanup is a breeze. Just soak everything in water. Irv