We did the interior of one Rebel with a flat beige automotive
enamel - turned out great, with a 'finished' look. You can always
add fabric headliner after ... Another was done with a spray can
of flat Tremclad rust paint - same cream colour, no primer, and
no peeling 10 years after ...
There was no need to prime, just wipe down with acetone to
de-grease. The airplane was assembled and flown for over 3 years
before the interior was painted - no problem. You could Scotchbrite
while building if you want, but degrease right before painting.
--
......bobp
http://bpatterson.qhealthbeauty.com
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-------------------------------orig.-------------------------
On Tuesday 12 September 2006 04:51 pm, Jesse Jenks wrote:
I am not installing any interior. I was planning to prime and paint each
piece of the cabin interior before riveting, but this seems to be a tedious
process. I was going to use the epoxy primer and then a good quality spray
can for color. My neighbor is a house painter and offered to paint the
interior with his HVLP setup after I get it all riveted. My question is how
do you adequately prep all the nooks and crannies that exist once it's all
put together, and around the rivets? I can scotchbright before riveting, but
it will be handled many times before painting.
What is the common practice here? Also, can I let him use house primer and
paint? It's cheap and durable, and I'm not looking for a gloss finish on the
interior anyway.
Thanks.
Jesse
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