I have no experience priming or painting. I read on another popular aircraft builders forum that many builders prime aluminum skins before dimpling a to save time, energy, and the abrasive pads last longer. My situation: I have fabricated my boot cowl skins, and I would like to dimple and install nut plates next. So, it appears like its time to prime these surfaces. My wish is to prime the interior of the boot cowl skins, install the nut plates, and then move on the next task in the building process. Final paint application would be WAYYY down the road....after the fuselage is covered with fabric, the engine hung, and the engine cowl is fabricated. I don t even know what color I want the boot cowl to be yet!
But the local Paint Supplier says all epoxy primers need to get painted with in 3 days of application. If they don't get covered, then the primed surface needs to be scuffed, cleaned, and a coat of primer reapplied before painting.
Reality is I wont paint the interior skins, I guess I will go ahead and prime them....but my question is....
Is my paint suppliers information that "all Epoxy Primers needs paint within 3 days of application" accurate?
No Primer/Paint wars please. Primer and Paint topics can get personal. Share with me your methods in a friendly, and agreeable manner.
But the local Paint Supplier says all epoxy primers need to get painted with in 3 days of application. If they don't get covered, then the primed surface needs to be scuffed, cleaned, and a coat of primer reapplied before painting.
Reality is I wont paint the interior skins, I guess I will go ahead and prime them....but my question is....
Is my paint suppliers information that "all Epoxy Primers needs paint within 3 days of application" accurate?
No Primer/Paint wars please. Primer and Paint topics can get personal. Share with me your methods in a friendly, and agreeable manner.
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