In case no one looked at the thread Bryan posted, that's RUSTOLEUM enamel in the US. Thin with 40% mineral spirits, and squeeze the roller out good when rolling, wet sand between coats, starting with a 150 or so grit and using finer paper as you go. It's cheap, the results seem reasonably good, but it's VERY time consuming! One guy posted that after the 5th coat he can paint his car (a 70s 2 door Duster, the size of a late 60s American) in about 1.5 hours and has about three coats to go. Figure 8 coats with an average of 2 hours (the first ones took a lot longer), so 16 hours just in painting. Takes at least four hours to dry enough for wet sanding. You COULD put on two coats in a day if you pushed, but figure one coat with the time to sand -- figure an average of two hours to sand as well. So that's a minimum of eight days to paint a car, then you have to buff it out. 8x4=32 hours with no body work. I'd probably figure 40 hours just to be sure everything is covered. That's not that bad at all, really. Patience is the key here! In a month you could have the car painted. Best to work one panel at a time, not try to do the whole car at once. That would take longer though. If you're patient and don't mind all the wet sanding you should get an adequate paint job, at least as good as a $300 Maaco job. But if there's a Maaco in your area, prep the car yourself and let them spray it. The prep is what costs so much, but if not done properly paint won't stick well and/or the surface won't be smooth. You're counting on your own work. The more prep they do the higher the costs -- you get what you pay for! I've wnet in and got a $250 paint job that ended up costing $800 -- I had them finish up what I started. Basically I did the first 2-3 coats of bondo and the major repairs and they finished to a smooth surface ready for paint. You can always do a final wet sand and buff yourself for a better finish. I think that's the way to go, really. The only way the DIY with a roller is going to pay off is if you're doing a panel at a time -- repair and paint. Then it may be more beneficial as you can do it all on your own schedule and take around a year to paint it. Might work well for repair work too (at least one fellow has done that). I may try it on the J-10 when I get around to doing some of the rust repairs. But then it's just a work truck, and I don't mind if there are some obvious repair spots. But for those with way more time than money, looks like $100 in paint and material should cover it... _______________________________________________ AMC-List mailing list AMC-List@xxxxxxxxxxxx http://www.amc-list.com/mailman/listinfo/amc-list or go to http://www.amc-list.com