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March 20th, 2009, 15:46 | #1 |
kraken
I want to spraypaint my kraken buttstock, grip and foregrip black. Will it last?
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March 20th, 2009, 15:48 | #2 |
Envies Disaster_Piece's hair
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yeah, just prime it. and if it doesn't, repaint it.
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March 20th, 2009, 15:50 | #3 |
Should i use krylon ultra flat or what?
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March 20th, 2009, 15:51 | #4 |
Envies Disaster_Piece's hair
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No idea I've never painted a gun myself, BUT, I am more than sure that using the search function will yield results, either that or google?
But, I'd imagine this is what you want. |
March 20th, 2009, 18:04 | #5 |
Sand the grips so that the surface is rough, prime it with a coat or two, wait to dry. Krylon has some great camo ultra flat paints that i would recommend.
I have painted my Tokyo Marui ak-47 olive drab colour with krylon paints. It looks great and is just wearing off a bit after a year and a half. After painting the surface will feel rough and sandy because of the paint. I used some sort of silicone based car paint cleanser thing and it worked amazingly. After that and some wearing in from holding it so long it looks and feels like it came with the gun. EDIT: Heres a picture of the finished paintjob Last edited by Jaxxin; March 20th, 2009 at 18:08.. |
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March 20th, 2009, 19:08 | #6 |
I painted the furniture on my C8 with Kylon Camo OD. I didn't use any primer at all. Since it's CA furniture, it has a rough, textured finish, so paint adheres well to it. The stock is an ABS JG stock from my HK416. I didn't rough that one up either. Just painted straight onto it. I sprayed on about 5 light coats. The gun's been used in 1 game, but handled and shot a lot at home, and the paint hasn't worn through anywhere yet, although I suspect it will eventually wear through on the stock. No big deal though, as then it just looks like it's a gun that's seen heavy field use, and I'm ok with that. If it gets bad, I can easily re-spray it.
Just a tip - when prepping to paint, clean the plastic parts with isopropyl alcohol. If you can get the 99% stuff from the drug store, even better than the regular 70%. It will clean off any dirt or oil and impurities from your skin. While you clean it and after cleaning, handle the parts with rubber gloves as to not get any oils and such on it. Spray it in light coats, allowing about 20 mins to dry between coats. Apply 3-5 coats for a nice, durable finish. If you want to have the finish last longer, you can get some Krylon matte clear and spray on a couple of coats of that once the base colour is dry. Let the parts dry at least 24 hours before handling them and reinstalling them on the gun.
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March 21st, 2009, 10:40 | #7 |
Thanks guys.
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