2014 Ford Raptor. Have to say the hardest paint I`ve ever worked with. Even scuff marks wouldn`t M105 out. Had to sand. Scratched and scuffed everywhere!
Came in looking like this but worse:
2014 Ford Raptor. Have to say the hardest paint I`ve ever worked with. Even scuff marks wouldn`t M105 out. Had to sand. Scratched and scuffed everywhere!
Came in looking like this but worse:
“Any man who can drive safely while kissing a pretty girl is simply not giving the kiss the attention it deserves.”
~Albert Einstein
Wow, someone has been brutal to that paint in a short amount of time. Maybe a MF pad and FG400?
Thanks but the question was what did I do to cause the fish eyes. Was able to buff them out, but still...
“Any man who can drive safely while kissing a pretty girl is simply not giving the kiss the attention it deserves.”
~Albert Einstein
Repaint I would assume.
This Raptor was really trashed and I went thru every combo and settled on M100 (I know- should` had M101) and a B&S cutting pad. After sanding w/ 2/25/3000!!
That`s when I noticed the fish eyes. Removed them with an Opti MF cutting disk with 105/D300.
Thinking somehow I imparted them ...
“Any man who can drive safely while kissing a pretty girl is simply not giving the kiss the attention it deserves.”
~Albert Einstein
Fish eyes are not caused by you, they are caused by improper painting or curing.
“Any man who can drive safely while kissing a pretty girl is simply not giving the kiss the attention it deserves.”
~Albert Einstein
I saw that about the fish eyes, but I guess I couldn`t see them in the photos. Maybe the metallic flake was throwing my vision off. Agree with the driver, if they are truly fish eyes, then it is a paint defect and not something you would have caused. The only "cause" you would have had was that you made the paint look good causing the fish eyes to rear their ugly head. Had this happen to me when I did my first detail on my 2003 Accord last year. Compounded the hood only to find I had clear coat failure (crows feet). I never saw them until I clarified the paint.
The Driver - above, is correct..
I dont see what you describe as Fisheyes in the pictures..
Fisheyes in paintwork are caused by impurities on the surface that cause the paint to move around them.. Get the analogy now?
They would have shown up at the Paint Level either in the Factory or as has been said already, in a Repaint that had very little or no Quality Control.. I doubt that the Factory would have let this happen..
Normally they show up immediately when applying the Paint and you have to stop, get the paint to dry, then go and take it all off the spot/s to the primer, remove that, clean, respray it all back, block sand, prime, block sand with a guidecoat, clean the heck out of everything and respray..
I did a couple of Raptors not long ago and found their paint hard but not impossible to remove all defects using Rotary Power..
Did you use Meguiars 105 with a Purple Foam Wool or similar pad, and a Rotary ?
Dan F
Fish Eyes are paint related. They usually come from silicone or some type of oily contamination prior to spraying the color coat. The paint "flows away" from the contaminates and does not adhere properly in those areas. The small craters left are known as fish eyes.
Thanks for all the replies.
Was assuming that because `Fish Eyes` was in quotes it would be read that I didn`t know what else to call them.
So the burning question of the day still is, what did I do to cause them?
“Any man who can drive safely while kissing a pretty girl is simply not giving the kiss the attention it deserves.”
~Albert Einstein
I see no fish eyes in the paint. Marring & scratches? Yes.
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