- First Name
- Ryan
- Joined
- Dec 12, 2021
- Threads
- 1
- Messages
- 133
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- 387
- Location
- Sacramento
- Website
- www.purveyorsofshine.com
- Vehicle(s)
- 22’ Ford Maverick XL
- Engine
- 2.0L EcoBoost
- Thread starter
- #181
Not entirely sure about that. I’m not a painter and I don’t work for a paint manufacture, so please elaborate. But I know the car manufactures are spraying the bare minimum these days. Any experienced detailer whos read paint over the years will tell you that it’s getting thinner. The amount of cars that come off the lot with little to no paint is astronomical compared to a decade or two ago.Are you reading all layers of the paint job? Electrocoat, primer, base, clear? How are you differentiating between the four separate coatings ?
The thickness of the paint has absolutely nothing to do with process times. The OEM's are not putting less paint on to speed up production. Regardless of paint thickness, 2 mills or 5 mils, the paint takes the same amount of time/temperature to cure. If anything the OEM paint suppliers, (I worked for one for 35 years), have been working on, and succeeding, at lower time-temperatures coatings because of cost but is has nothing to do with DFT. To your point if the coating can dry at 250F for 30 minutes vs. 350F for 45 minutes then yes production is sped up along with lowering energy costs.
I’m not going to get into a he said, she said but we have a chemist in the industry, Dr. David Ghoudussi. He was part of the team that created the modern day base coat/clear coat paint system and he still works with most of these manufacturers today. He also owns Optimum Polymer Technologies. I’ve had conversations with Dr. G, listened to him speak many times and have well researched these subjects. These manufacturers are figuring out how to put less paint on your car. Whether it’s to save money, time or whatever, it’s happening. They’ve had 30+ years to research these paint systems and with the introduction of e-coats, they dont need to spray that much paint on these cars anymore to make then last. But that leaves a lot less room for error and correction. As a detailer and someone who likes their vehicles to look nice, it’s disappointing. I see 20 year old cars with more clear coat on them than I have anywhere on my brand new truck. This obviously varies brand to brand but it’s very real.
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