jadonk
New member
I have a truck camper build going on and am nearing time to paint the shell. Construction method is wood/foam composite panels with the exterior surfaces being 1/8" plywood skin. Each panel is joined with fiberglass tapes at the edges. All surfaces were then covered with a 2 part epoxy coating, this stuff: https://ssttoolbox.widen.net/view/pdf/e6pifwuqbt/T-R-RPS70-9.pdf?t.download=true&u=cjmyin
This coating is not UV stable, so it needs to be painted. Also, the coating was rolled on, so the surface needing to be painted has a pretty significant orange peel texture.
I'm kind of on the fence on what my final finish product should be. My main concern is with the texture on the substrate and how to prep it. Pretty much any paint/primer is going to require the surface to be sanded, but I'm not how well that is going to work in the low spots of the texture. Does anyone have any recommendations on prepping a textured surface?
Also feel free to throw out recommendations for specific paints too. I have hvlp spray equipment, so the plan was to use it for this step, so sprayable products would be preferred. The epoxy coating is super-durable, so I was leaning away from the truck bed liner type products.
Thanks all!
This coating is not UV stable, so it needs to be painted. Also, the coating was rolled on, so the surface needing to be painted has a pretty significant orange peel texture.
I'm kind of on the fence on what my final finish product should be. My main concern is with the texture on the substrate and how to prep it. Pretty much any paint/primer is going to require the surface to be sanded, but I'm not how well that is going to work in the low spots of the texture. Does anyone have any recommendations on prepping a textured surface?
Also feel free to throw out recommendations for specific paints too. I have hvlp spray equipment, so the plan was to use it for this step, so sprayable products would be preferred. The epoxy coating is super-durable, so I was leaning away from the truck bed liner type products.
Thanks all!