I painted my gas tank the same way I painted my car a couple years ago: with a bucket of Rustoleum, a paintbrush, and a bunch of sandpaper. I've got a real nice, flat finish now but I need to get a clear coat on it that will resist fuel spills, according to what I've read on this site.
I had planned on going to a collision shop and having them spray an automotive 2-part paint on the tank. I took it to a guy last week who said he wasn't sure if his paint would mesh with the Rustoleum, but he gave me a little plastic bottle with a sample of his clear in it which was left over after he'd just sprayed a car, and I took it home and tried it out on the underside of the tank where I had painted the Rustoleum. It looked totally fine a few days later, no cracking or peeling. I tried rubbing fuel on it and it had no affect, although I found that the fuel didn't have an affect on the bare Rustoleum right next to it either... odd.
The guy who gave me that paint said he could do the tank for $50, so I started calling other shops to see if I could get it done cheaper. The first guy I called said no way, you can't put his paint on Rustoleum because they're "just different," and it would crack and peel if he tried it. He also said he didn't know how the other guy gave me a sample, because real 2-part paint turns solid pretty soon after you mix it. I haven't checked the sample yet to see if it's hardened, but I'm starting to get real confused here.
Anyone have some insight on this? I (obviously) don't know much about paint and I keep getting different information from different sources about:
-Whether or not bare Rustoleum paint is fuel resistant
-Whether or not 2-part clear paint will destroy the Rustoleum
-Whether or not the sample bottle the 1st guy gave me is actually a 2-part paint
I'll check the sample bottle to see if it's hardened as soon as I get a chance. I just want to get the thing fuel-proof before the weather gets any nicer!
Marshall
I had planned on going to a collision shop and having them spray an automotive 2-part paint on the tank. I took it to a guy last week who said he wasn't sure if his paint would mesh with the Rustoleum, but he gave me a little plastic bottle with a sample of his clear in it which was left over after he'd just sprayed a car, and I took it home and tried it out on the underside of the tank where I had painted the Rustoleum. It looked totally fine a few days later, no cracking or peeling. I tried rubbing fuel on it and it had no affect, although I found that the fuel didn't have an affect on the bare Rustoleum right next to it either... odd.
The guy who gave me that paint said he could do the tank for $50, so I started calling other shops to see if I could get it done cheaper. The first guy I called said no way, you can't put his paint on Rustoleum because they're "just different," and it would crack and peel if he tried it. He also said he didn't know how the other guy gave me a sample, because real 2-part paint turns solid pretty soon after you mix it. I haven't checked the sample yet to see if it's hardened, but I'm starting to get real confused here.
Anyone have some insight on this? I (obviously) don't know much about paint and I keep getting different information from different sources about:
-Whether or not bare Rustoleum paint is fuel resistant
-Whether or not 2-part clear paint will destroy the Rustoleum
-Whether or not the sample bottle the 1st guy gave me is actually a 2-part paint
I'll check the sample bottle to see if it's hardened as soon as I get a chance. I just want to get the thing fuel-proof before the weather gets any nicer!
Marshall
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