Has anyone tried the following method? What are the methods you use to fill pin 
holes???

Pinholes 
These are tiny voids, bubbles and pits caused by air mixed into the filler. 
They are invisible until the minute you start spraying the first coat of 
primer. They can give you a big headache if you attack them the wrong way. You 
might have heard horror stories of builders spraying coat after coat of primer 
trying to get rid of them. The bottom line is, you cannot fill the pinholes by 
spraying. Yes, if you keep spraying long enough, eventually they will 
disappear, but they will not be filled, they will be bridged. Bridged pinholes 
can cause the painted surface to develop little pimple like bumps on the sun 
when the paint softens some and the trapped air expands with the heat. 
Luckily, we have a simple effective way how to deal with pinholes before we 
even see any. Vacuum the surface real well to remove any dust and then squeegee 
pure epoxy resin over the surface. The coat is very thin and the amount of 
resin is mall, you are basically just wetting the surface, give it some time to 
soak in and squeegee off all the excess. The resin has very low surface tension 
so it flows into all those small voids and because unlike primers it doesn't 
contain any volatiles it doesn't shrink as it cures so the fill is complete. 
The second benefit of this step is that the resins hardens the top shell of the 
micro, making it more durable. 
A word of caution, many epoxy resins do not cure well and stay gummy at very 
thin coat, especially in humid condition. If yours is one of those or you are 
not sure, use the West system epoxy for this. 
When this top coat is cured sand it lightly with 100 just to break the gloss, 
and you are ready for the primer. 


Mark Jones (N886MJ)
Wales, WI  USA 
E-mail me at flyk...@wi.rr.com
Visit my KR-2S CorvAIRCRAFT web site at   
http://mywebpage.netscape.com/n886mj/homepage.html

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