Question
I have been hurled into the world of black lacquer. In the 10 years my cabinet shop has been finishing its own cabinets, I never had requests for it, and now I have three in a row. I have been spraying General Finishes black acrylic and undercoat. I have been really impressed by the quality of the product. The undercoat dries quickly, and the topcoat becomes very hard with a great feel. The first project I sprayed was a single cabinet and it went pretty well. I am currently working on a pair of large euro style bathrooms (vanities and linens) and I am starting to feel really out of my league.
I do not have a booth, just a 16x24 room with a fan in the window and a 4000 CFM recirculating air filter that originally came out of a hospital. I am spraying the undercoat with my airless and the topcoat with my Asturo Eco ssp hooked to a 2.5 gallon pressure pot (tank 15 psi, air 22 psi triggered, 1.3 mm needle/nozzle set), because the acrylic topcoat was micro-bubbling with the airless. My room is separated from the main shop by a pair of large swinging doors. I have been spraying the topcoat during odd hours to try to cut down on dust issues.
I can't get the topcoat to come out as nice as I would like. The coat lies out well for the most part, but I feel like my gun is struggling to atomize the product. And when I do get the gun working well, it never fails that I end up with some sort of crud in the finish (dust specks, paint specks, an eyelash, etc.).
The end result is typically good, minus the random dust specks and occasional ripple when you hold the finish up to a raking light. But I am used to putting out finishes that look pretty darn awesome and I am struggling to achieve that here. Anyone have a good recipe for success with waterbased black lacquer/acrylic?
My current schedule is as follows:
1. One strong coat of undercoat
2. Sand flat with Klingspor 240 sc using a Dynabrade 1/3 sander, vacuum parts, then wipe down with 50/50 alcohol and water
3. One coat black acrylic
4. Sand flat with Klingspor 400 sc using Dynabrade sander, vacuum parts, wipe down
5. Topcoat black acrylic
Forum Responses
(Finishing Forum)
As for the tack rags, I was unaware that you could use these with waterbased products. I have seen on the General Finishes web site that they make a waterbased compatible tack rag, but I do not know where I can get them locally. After I suit up, I blow myself off before I enter the paint room, but it never fails that something lands in the finish.