Okay, I have read and researched every thread I can find on spraying Thunderbird and still can't get it right. Maybe somebody here can figure out what I am doing wrong. I have been using the following procedure and end up with pinhead sized craters everywhere in the finish. The bow finish, when sprayed onto the bow, never lays down or smoothes out. My setup:
1. Equipment
• VLP air gun
• Three air regulators
o 1 at the compressor (set at 120psi so it doesn’t cycle much during the spraying)
o 1 after the water filter (set at 44 psi)
o 1 at the gun ( set between 30-42 depending on where I get the best coat on the test wood)
• One water/moisture filter half way between the compressor and the hose (I run a coiled 50’ hose from the compressor to air filter and then another 50’ hose from the filter to the gun)
• Portable Spray Booth with air filters and exhaust fan (really good circulation so over spray or mist is not an issue)
• Good mask/filter-so the odors are not making me loopier then I already am
2. Thunderbird
a. Mixed one part 10 mil) A to one part B (10 mil (measured with syringes , so the mixture is dead on))
b. Let set for 30 minutes per directions
c. Thin with Thunderbird thinner (varies, tried 10mil and varied it +/- 5mil for there)
d. Test spray on piece of wood, usually same type as the riser and it looks fine
3. Preparation
a. Sand wood parts to 220-440
b. Sand glass to 600
c. Air off the entire bow
d. Bow is hung from the top tip and is not touched after being cleaned
e. Clean entire bow with denatured alcohol
4. Application
a. Spray form 8-16” (tried these distances and everything in between) with a steady, continuous, movement and distance of the spray gun.
b. Spray, starting above the top tip of the bow and continue past the bottom tip
c. Riser section is sprayed using the same method as above.
5. Results
a. The finish lands on the glass and the craters form immediately
b. The riser doesn’t look bad at this point but develops pinhead sized craters before the next application (2 ½-3 hours)
c. When the finish hits the bow there are white, pinhead sized spots everywhere
d. They stay white for about twelve hours before turning clear.
Final analysis: Looks like $#!t
Getting tired of the old routine of spray on, sand off, spray on, snap off………. In case you can’t tell I am extremely frustrated with this finish.
Any constructive suggestions would be appreciated.