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Factory paint in 1965 |
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Raccoonman
AMC Nut Joined: Dec/11/2016 Location: North Charlesto Status: Offline Points: 447 |
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Posted: Oct/10/2017 at 12:32pm |
What type of paint was AMC using in '65? Mainly curious. Where the paint hasn't come off, it looks solid. funny that the entire roof has little to no remaining paint on top, just the A pillars and C pillars.
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rocklandrambler
AMC Addicted Joined: Feb/09/2013 Location: Nanuet, NY Status: Offline Points: 3953 |
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AMC's used an acrylic enamel. It should be stated on your door tag.
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Past AMC's
1974 Hornet X (new) 1975 Gremlin X (new) 1964 Classic 660 Cross Country 1965 American 440-H |
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Raccoonman
AMC Nut Joined: Dec/11/2016 Location: North Charlesto Status: Offline Points: 447 |
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Looking at some color chip charts on the web, it seems that my Classic is/was Viscount Blue. Quite attractive color IMHO. Wish more of the car had good paint on it! Will definitely try to duplicate it after all this mechanical work is out of the way.
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FSJunkie
AMC Addicted Joined: Jan/09/2011 Location: Flagstaff, AZ Status: Offline Points: 4742 |
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Baked acrylic enamel. It is rock hard and very durable. I've found it is harder and more durable than modern paint. I have several cars with original acrylic enamel on them. If you accidentally brush past them with a piece of metal on your clothing, like a zipper or jeans rivets, it won't scratch the paint. It scratches the metal piece of your clothing off onto the paint, which can then be polished off with very little effort. The paint is literally harder than some brass or steel alloys.
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1955 Packard
1966 Marlin 1972 Wagoneer 1973 Ambassador 1977 Hornet 1982 Concord D/L 1984 Eagle Limited |
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tyrodtom
AMC Addicted Joined: Sep/14/2007 Location: Virginia Status: Offline Points: 6213 |
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That's a little bit of a exaggeration there FSJunkie.
I was working on these cars straight off the transporter in 1973, and was fresh out of the Army, still wore my old brass buckled fatigue belt. I learned right quick you didn't lean out over a car and let your belt buckle come in contact with the paint, or the buttons on your shirt either. Even though the paint was oven baked at 275+ degrees, the paint didn't fully cure all the way through till several weeks later. I agree the old oven baked acrylic enamel was tougher than anything they've come up with yet, except the full urethane paints like Imron. But they weren't perfect, cars still paint chipped from gravel, and other road debris, and factories still had their occasional paint failures.
Edited by tyrodtom - Oct/11/2017 at 6:50am |
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66 American SW, 66 American 2dr, 82 J10, 70 Hornet, Pound, Va.
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Devilboy
Supporter of TheAMCForum Joined: Jun/14/2017 Location: Nebraska Status: Offline Points: 997 |
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Mine was a nice metallic Viscount Blue too. Where it hasn't faded is nice. The rest, no so much. I feel your struggle Raccoonman. I would love to return mine to it's original color too.
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Samuelsc360
AMC Apprentice Joined: Aug/19/2017 Location: Chesnee SC Status: Offline Points: 145 |
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I'm a long time body and paint man. If I remember correctly, Acrylic Enamel didn't come out until 1966. Ford was the first to use it.
Before then it was Nitrocellulose Lacquer or Synthetic Enamel. Eugene
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pacerman
Supporter of TheAMCForum Joined: Jul/03/2007 Location: United States Status: Offline Points: 9057 |
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Yep. I thought it was alkyd enamel (cured by losing the solvents only) before the acrylic enamel (indicated by an "A" in the paint code was used. Acrylic enamel cures by chemical crosslinking and I don't the the chemistry had been used in production until about the time AMC began using it. Joe
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Happiness is making something out of nothing.
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Devilboy
Supporter of TheAMCForum Joined: Jun/14/2017 Location: Nebraska Status: Offline Points: 997 |
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Weird. Mine is a 1965 and has an A paint code. P6A. Viscount Blue Metallic.
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tyrodtom
AMC Addicted Joined: Sep/14/2007 Location: Virginia Status: Offline Points: 6213 |
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The door plate on my 66 says it's acrylic enamel, not just a a A in the code, but it states on the plate the car is finished in oven baked acrylic enamel.
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66 American SW, 66 American 2dr, 82 J10, 70 Hornet, Pound, Va.
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