crowbar032
Gold Member
- Joined
- Jan 19, 2012
- Messages
- 336
- Location
- Moores Hill, Indiana
- Tractor
- MF 150, TO-35, John Deere 5065E, Caterpiller 953 track loader, NH LS170 Skid Steer
I waffled back and forth on which sub-forum to post this question....parts/repairs seemed the most logical.
Ever have one of "those" projects that keep going. It started with a miss in the MF150, which led to a valve job, which led to replacing the plastic nose, which led me to the question of a re-paint (might as well get a new seat while I'm at it and fix the gas gauge, gonna need some brakes here soon too). Apparently in 1968, MF decided to put a plastic nose cone on these tractors. Some 46 years later, the plastic is brittle and cracked (plus I broke a chunk off of it getting a bolt out). I finally tracked down a metal replacement. It comes primed (red) and ready to paint. Now I don't have anything against Rudolph, but I don't want my tractor to look like him by putting a shiny new red nose on an also faded out red hood. I'm trying to decide if I want to tackle painting the hood, fenders and nose myself. I have no sanding/sand blasting or paint tools and equipment so think HarborFreight for recommendations as I hope to never do this again. Sandblast first or clean well and start painting? Primer first, then finish? What type of gun gravity or suction? What size nozzle on the spray gun 1, 1.3, 1.8? What type of paint? Hardener? Clearcoat?
I suspect opinions to be all over the place, I'm just looking for a "painting 101 for dummies." I'm not looking to win any show ribbons, just get it where it looks decent and fend off some rust.
Ever have one of "those" projects that keep going. It started with a miss in the MF150, which led to a valve job, which led to replacing the plastic nose, which led me to the question of a re-paint (might as well get a new seat while I'm at it and fix the gas gauge, gonna need some brakes here soon too). Apparently in 1968, MF decided to put a plastic nose cone on these tractors. Some 46 years later, the plastic is brittle and cracked (plus I broke a chunk off of it getting a bolt out). I finally tracked down a metal replacement. It comes primed (red) and ready to paint. Now I don't have anything against Rudolph, but I don't want my tractor to look like him by putting a shiny new red nose on an also faded out red hood. I'm trying to decide if I want to tackle painting the hood, fenders and nose myself. I have no sanding/sand blasting or paint tools and equipment so think HarborFreight for recommendations as I hope to never do this again. Sandblast first or clean well and start painting? Primer first, then finish? What type of gun gravity or suction? What size nozzle on the spray gun 1, 1.3, 1.8? What type of paint? Hardener? Clearcoat?
I suspect opinions to be all over the place, I'm just looking for a "painting 101 for dummies." I'm not looking to win any show ribbons, just get it where it looks decent and fend off some rust.