Phil Mailloux
14th January 2007, 10:22 PM
Hey Guys,
I've asked a bunch of questions in th Musical Instrument forum about this product (see my "Nitro-Cellulose thread) and have gotten a few good answers (thanks Mick). I've got several new questions about this and figured the finishing forum will most likely get me more answers.
So I build bass guitars and have always use Nitro-Cellulose. I can't find Nitro locally and have been told that Mirocat is a new version of nitro, better safer ect... so I figured I'll try it and see if it's really as good for my application.
So I got a 4 ltr can of Mirocat pc 3220 60% gloss and decided to spray a Tassie Blackwood computer desk I'm building to try it out before I start using this on my basses.
I sprayed it through a gravity feed gun/compressor setup at 50 psi. I had a pretty hard time regulating the flow out of this but then again it's the first time I sprayed lacquer out of this new gun. So anyway, what I did notice is the film is pretty thin to me. Another annoyance I saw later is that the datasheet says I should wait one hour to let it dry and then sand it with 400 before I can do a second coat.
I'm used to do 4 coats a day with nitro with no sandng between layers. Each coat melts into the other. With a total of about 12 to 15 coats of lacquer on a bass over a period of 3-4 days.Do I really have to sand every coat of mirocat beore I do another one? That really won't work well on a bass...
So... I decided to spray a second coat after about 30-40 minutes (no sanding) I didn't see much of a difference and the film still looks quite thin.
FINALLY! my questions :D
Cabinet makers out there that use Mirocat, what's your finishing schedule?
Anyone that might have used this product, how thick of a layer can you get?
Anyone has got any other tips or tricks about using this thing?
While we're at it here's some eye-candy. The desk I was spraying today. :)
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v104/philmailloux/P1150107.jpg
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v104/philmailloux/P1150103.jpg
I've asked a bunch of questions in th Musical Instrument forum about this product (see my "Nitro-Cellulose thread) and have gotten a few good answers (thanks Mick). I've got several new questions about this and figured the finishing forum will most likely get me more answers.
So I build bass guitars and have always use Nitro-Cellulose. I can't find Nitro locally and have been told that Mirocat is a new version of nitro, better safer ect... so I figured I'll try it and see if it's really as good for my application.
So I got a 4 ltr can of Mirocat pc 3220 60% gloss and decided to spray a Tassie Blackwood computer desk I'm building to try it out before I start using this on my basses.
I sprayed it through a gravity feed gun/compressor setup at 50 psi. I had a pretty hard time regulating the flow out of this but then again it's the first time I sprayed lacquer out of this new gun. So anyway, what I did notice is the film is pretty thin to me. Another annoyance I saw later is that the datasheet says I should wait one hour to let it dry and then sand it with 400 before I can do a second coat.
I'm used to do 4 coats a day with nitro with no sandng between layers. Each coat melts into the other. With a total of about 12 to 15 coats of lacquer on a bass over a period of 3-4 days.Do I really have to sand every coat of mirocat beore I do another one? That really won't work well on a bass...
So... I decided to spray a second coat after about 30-40 minutes (no sanding) I didn't see much of a difference and the film still looks quite thin.
FINALLY! my questions :D
Cabinet makers out there that use Mirocat, what's your finishing schedule?
Anyone that might have used this product, how thick of a layer can you get?
Anyone has got any other tips or tricks about using this thing?
While we're at it here's some eye-candy. The desk I was spraying today. :)
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v104/philmailloux/P1150107.jpg
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v104/philmailloux/P1150103.jpg