I used to paint cars back in the 90's, it was something my father trained me to do during my apprenticeship and really interested me, ended up becoming a bit of an intense hobby and even had quite a good spray booth setup and got well known in the custom painting world. But alas, getting the very best finish, for me, meants being able to get close to the paint, which meant not wearing a mask, which then led to caughing up coloured flem of whatever colour I had painted last and the wife back then made me stop..
The problem is, you want a "decent job", and that is really subjective.. Estimating the expectations of the customer and meeting them, is the hardest thing in the paint world, where smoke and mirrors is really part of a refinishers day to day grind.
I do not know of anyone who does a really proper job, because, its not profitable to do a perfect job.. On the cars I painted, I would spend anything from 40 hours, to 200 hours perfecting the prep, anything from 4 hours painting and babysitting the car between coats, monitoring the film drying and tweaking/retarding its flashing rates, and about 40 hours post paintwork perfecting and pampering following the paint job, the final article was way better than comes out of any factory, and there are only a couple of painters in the world I know who put in that kind of effort, one is in Ohio, and the other is in Surrey, both charge anything from £10k to £50k on a paintjob.
Now the reason I mention this, is this kind of level of detail is the only way you meet everyones expectations... Its a bit like asking for your portrait to be painted.. Any one of my friends could do it if they had the inclination, even if they are not artists, but your pretty certainly not going to be happy with it, likewise, some people had their portraits painted by some of the greatests artists of all time, and were not happy with the outcome.
The paintwork is only ever as good as the prep, and I am often amazed that any painter would be happy painting something that someone else had prepped.. Unless of course, they take comfort in the "Well if I had done the prep..." get out of jail card..
So the problem is.. Anyone who is going to give you a good finish, is going to not be doing it from home... My first cars I painted were passable, they looked fine, but as my skills progressed, my standards went up, I can now see a serious amount of defects in every paint job I see and I am never happy with the paint on any car, weather it be a new Porsche, Lambo, Ferrari or Rolls Royce.
What I am getting at is this.. If you meet someone willing to paint your car, weather it be for £500 or £10,000, how is he going to know how good a job you want? and will he deserve not to be paid, if you do not get the quality you are expecting?
From a painters perspective, there are a large amount of variables and levels of painting quality and not really the language or units of measurement to describe them.. But not only this, unless your painting the car in a booth and using good kit and good quality materials, it is impossible to even be repeatable, and guarantee the same quality finish every time, however hard the painter tries.
My advice, if you really want a cheap paint job, buy a bonnet, a compressor, some guns and materials and start teaching yourself to spray... Once you can get the bonnet looking like you want it, then you will be ready to have a go on your car, and if your not happy with that, keep re-doing it until you are happy and find your own comfort level of quality... If you're anything like I was, you will find the learning curve really satisfying and that spraying is the easy bit, which is over way too fast, as it is also the most satisfying bit.. but the prep, takes forever, and although can be theraputic, it is so hard to resist painting the car too soon.
There are a couple of people on here who spray cars for a living, they may or may not agree with me, but it would be interesting to hear their thoughts.
_________________ Clean it, wax it, love it, ENJOY it... then fix it
Jon Mitchell Independent Porsche Specialists Technical Advisors to TIPEC http://www.jmgporsche.co.uk https://twitter.com/JMG_PORSCHE http://www.facebook.com/jmgporsche
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