Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

Haha, now I'm driving along the freeway and look beside me, the guy overtaking me in a Tida is smoking cones.

Spoiler alert..bad joke coming..

Maybe that's why they call it a highway...

Man this job cracks me up sometimes :laugh:

fouad-fg-pic1_160_1243454678.jpg

spotted a black r34 in hoppers had number plates blk r34 something like that....

saw a black r32 with stokies exhaust lowered. sayers road.

always see a red r34 stock as a rock dont think he will be on here sayers road morning and arvo.

Pearl White V36 370GT type SP coupe with factory 19" wheels and Akebono brakes coming out of Fountain Gate yesterday around 1:30PM. Probably the nicest example of a V I've ever seen.

Last night down Lygon, a silver V35 around 11:00PM heading towards the City.

And an awesome R34 GT-R parked outside the Trak on Toorak Rd past midnight. Think it was gunmetal grey but not too sure.

Often see a white R33 gtst parked on the roadside of Garden Rd (facing towards Wellington) - had the petrol cap missing awhile ago too, but just passed it on the way home around 5, and it seems you've found it :P

Spotted a whole bunch of SAU members at Garage Cafe last night, I might be mistaken, but it seemed like a meet of some sort? :P

Spotted this beautiful R35 on King Street this morning:

tumblr_m27zxyT9xD1qjfgqbo1_500.jpg

(photo stolen from the internet)

Spotted a white R34 in Mordialloc, looked and sounded nice too jill61-603505-albums-emoticons-pic61295-th-smiley-two-thumbs-up.gif

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now



  • Similar Content

  • Latest Posts

    • With stone chips, you really can't just try to fill them. You really have to sand that spot to lower the edges of the chip, so that the filler will end up covering a wider patch than just the chip. Otherwise, you're trying to have a sharp edged paint surface match up to some filler, and they just do not sand the same and you always end up with a noticable transition. A bunch of adjacent chips should be well sanded back, to round off all those edges, and use a lot (in a relative sense) of filler to raise the whole area back.
    • To expand on this to help understanding... The bigger/longer the block is, the more it's going to work to sit on your far away high areas, and not touch the low stuff in the middle. When you throw the guide coat, and give it a quick go with a big block, guide coat will disappear in the high spots. If those high spots are in the correct position where the panel should be, stop sanding, and fill the low spots. However, using a small block, you "fall off" one of the high spots, and now your sanding the "side of the hill". Your little block would have been great for the stone chips, where you only use a very small amount of filler, so you're sanding and area let's say the size of a 5/10cent piece, with something that is 75*150. For the big panel, go bigger!   And now I'll go back to my "body work sucks, it takes too much patience, and I don't have it" PS, I thought your picture with coloured circles was an ultra sound... That's after my brain thought you were trying to make a dick and balls drawing...
    • Oh I probably didn't speak enough about the small sanding block for blocking large areas.  In the video about 3 minutes in, he talks about creating valleys in the panel. This is the issue with using a small sanding block for a large area, it's way too easy to create the valleys he is talking about. With a large block its much easier to create a nice flat surface.  Hard to explain but in practice you'll notice the difference straight away using the large block. 
    • Yep I guessed as much. You'll find life much easier with a large block something like this -  https://wholesalepaint.com.au/products/dura-block-long-hook-loop-sanding-block-100-eva-rubber-af4437 This is a good demo video of something like this in use -    You have turned your small rock chip holes into large low spots. You'll need to fill and block these low spots.  It's always a little hard not seeing it in person, but yes I would go ahead and lay filler over the whole area. Have a good look at the video I linked, it's a very good example of all the things you're doing. They went to bare metal, they are using guide coat, they are doing a skim coat with the filler and blocking it back. If what you're doing doesn't look like what they are doing, that's a big hint for you  
×
×
  • Create New...