Good brand of paint for painting dj equipment
Good brand of paint for painting dj equipment Posted on: 07.05.2012 by Camie Sorg Hey guys, I'm fairly new to the who dj tech modding, so I want to start simple. I've never done it before so I want to start simple by painting some of my gear
. I don't want to ruin it either, and I want it to look good so I was wondering from your guys experience, what is a good kind of paint to get to use? | |
Camie Sorg 07.05.2012 | Hey guys, I'm fairly new to the who dj tech modding, so I want to start simple. I've never done it before so I want to start simple by painting some of my gear . I don't want to ruin it either, and I want it to look good so I was wondering from your guys experience, what is a good kind of paint to get to use? |
Yong Aptekar 11.05.2012 | If you are doing plastic, krylon has a plastic paint called h2O that goes on real smooth, and is pretty durable. I was painting skateboards with it only because it is latex based, and went on smoother than the regular paint. Pretty easily stripped if you tire of it, but it lasts pretty long. |
Layne Koop 08.05.2012 | For speaker cabinets or rack cases, Duratex is the best stuff out there. |
Camie Sorg 07.05.2012 | Thanks for the responses guys, they are very helpful! |
Deangelo Boender 07.05.2012 | if you're competent in your ability to take apart your gear, you have a few different options. Some metal parts can be powder coated, and a local powder coat shop might be able to paint your unit for 20-100 dollars. a powder coat finish on a dj unit will last you until retirement. as far as just spray painting goes, synthet1c has a point, spray paint sucks. you can make it work though. I would recommend rustoleum, but picking the right brand of paint is only the first step. make sure to prime your surface, use multiple coats of paint sprayed as evenly as possible, and use multiple coats of clear coat on top. make sure to buff the paint clean, and lightly sand each layer of paint before applying the next coat, and to do the same when it comes to the clear coat. it's more about investing the time and effort, versus finding the perfect paint. |
Jonathan Chiuchiolo 07.05.2012 | If this is for turntables and if you wan't to do a good job that will last years use automotive 2pac paint with a spray gun, paint in a can is air drying acrylic... It will only last a year or so if you prepare everything properly and quality of the spray is terrible as you cant easily manage the patchy air pressure of the can, and how thin the paint is, so you will end up with a job thats doth dry and runny, and forget buffing it to fix it. If it's a one time job prepare and prime everything yourself then take it into an auto repair shop and get it done properly, it shouldn't cost much more than $100 for a basic color or metallic... If this is something you will be looking at doing regularly you should invest in a small compressor and a small hobby gun if your going to use clearcoat, or a larger gut if your using enamel (solid color), it will probably cost $150 for decent enough gear... For paint I used to love "DuPont" as it sprayed the best, it's hard wearing and has good coverage, "spartin" was always too thin for me... if you want wow factor of pearls, candy's and prism "color shift" paint you can't go past "House of Kolor". If it's for a controller anything will do as they don't demand a propper job like technics do and you will probably replace the thing before the paint is a problem. I have never painted turntables but 1000's of cars & motorbikes professionally... even a fridge once lol |
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