Title: Corvette Paint Restoration and Judging
1Corvette PaintRestoration and Judging
- NCRS Guidelines to
- Typical Corvette Factory Paint Finish and Body
preparation
2Brief History of Corvette Paint
- 1953 1957 Nitro-saleous Lacquer Paint
- 1955 Start of the use of Metallic paint
- 1958 Acrylic Lacquer Paint
- 1985 Clearcoat Paint process
- C5s Waterborn Paint
3Typical Lacquer Paint Finish
- Small, tight-patterned orange peel appearance
before buffing, due to high solvent, low solid
nature of lacquer - Normally buffed with very coarse compound to
level finish and improve gloss level (OEM
applications) - Darker colors were buffed more than the lighter
colors, due to showing more orange peel
4Typical Lacquer Paint Finish
- Areas not buffed normally exhibit low gloss
level, and small-patterned orange peel - Side vents on mid-years, bottom areas of body and
doors, door jams - Less paint applied in number of areas, such as
bottom of body and doors, radiator support, door
jams, etc.. - Metallics striping or mottling is very common
with lacquer paint
5Key Paint Points
- Distinctiveness of Image (DOI) is one key focus
of determining if paint appears as typical
factory paint finish - Shininess, or lack thereof, is not a factor in
judging paint (Shiny is irrelevant) - Typical Dealer Preparation would have included a
wax job with Blue Coral type wax, which would
brighten (shiny) up the paint significantly
6Orange Peel
71963-1967 Exterior Paint ProcessAccording to GM
Factory Bulletin
- Source Chevrolet Engineering Center
- Date September, 1965
- Primary Sanding All body panels and bonded
joints that received acrylic lacquer are dry
sanded to prepare surfaces for painting. A
filler material (called putty rub/lacquer glaze
putty) is applied to the entire body to fill
minor imperfections - Primer Two coats of primer are applied (the
first red, and the second gray) and are oven
baked for 60 minutes at 280 degrees F.
8Factory Photo Body Sanding
91963-1967 Exterior Paint ProcessAccording to GM
Factory Bulletin
- Wet Sanding The body is wet-sanded to provide a
smooth surface for the sealers. Most of the gray
primer coat is removed with the red primer acting
as a depth signal for the sanding operation. The
Body is dried to remove all moisture. - Note The Factory used a power orbital/DA sander,
which did not leave any straight sanding marks
(something to look for when judging and be
careful of when restoring) - Note No Gelcoat was used in original process
(press molded fiberglass was used, and cars baked
at 280 degrees) - Sealer One coat of sealer and one coat of
acrylic lacquer are applied and baked. - Notes equivalent to a thin layer of primer
Sealer sealed primer and and improved adhesion
between primer and paint
10Factory Photos Wet Sanding
111963-1967 Exterior Paint ProcessAccording to GM
Factory Bulletin
- Dry Sanding The body is dry sanded to prepare
surfaces for the final acrylic lacquer - Lacquering Three coats of acrylic lacquer are
sprayed on the body to build up the required
paint thickness. The paint is rested for eight
minutes to permit it to partially set up and to
remove excess volatile paint vehicle (paint
thinner).
12Factory Photo Paint booth
13Factory Photos Paint Booth
141963-1967 Exterior Paint ProcessAccording to GM
Factory Bulletin
- Initial Baking The body is oven baked for 30
minutes at 140 degrees F, to harden the paint
which permits the subsequent operation. Small
interior and exterior parts are painted to
complete the body paint schedule. - Final Baking To assure a durable, hard, high
luster finish, the lacquer is oven baked for 45
minutes at 250 degrees F. Reheating the lacquer
permits the paint film to soften, and allows the
surface blemishes and sanding scratches to
disappear during the thermo-flow process.
151963-1967 Exterior Paint ProcessAccording to GM
Factory Bulletin
- Final Sanding and Polishing The body is lightly
oil sanded and polished to bring painted surfaces
to a high luster finish. - Note Factory Sanding was really spot Sanding,
as they did not go over the entire surface of the
car - Note DOI (Distinctiveness of Image) goes down
the lower on the car you go. The focus of
sanding an polishing was on the tops and sides of
the Corvette
16Factory Photo Paint Polishing
17Metallic Colors
- Metallic colors are formulated with a type of
pigment and aluminum flake in the binder that
allows light to penetrate the surface of cured
paint film. This light penetration, reflecting
off the aluminum flake and passing around pigment
particles of varying density, produce the
ultimate color shade. - The bars in the graphic represent aluminum flake
and the specks represent pigment particles.
Considering this fact, the following
cross-sectional views of metallic paint film
illustrate how varying shades of color may be
produced from the same can of paint.
18Light Source
Color
Primer
Fiberglass / metal
The Uniform dispersion and density and of
aluminum flake and pigment particles Shown
results in a standard color shade.
19Color
Primer
Fiberglass / metal
As shown in this illustration, an accumulation of
aluminum flake, dispersed nearly Horizontally at
the top of the paint film and obscuring most of
the pigment particles Beneath results in a light
color shade.
20Color
Primer
Fiberglass / metal
When the flake is allowed to settle deeper in the
base material, it lays at different Angles to the
light source, and the pigments cover more of the
flake, which Results in a darker shade/color,
with less brilliance.
21Metallic Paint Colors
- The actual size of the metallic flakes was much
smaller in the 50s and 60s than they are in
todays metallic colors (appear almost dust
sized in typical factory finish) - However, there were some coarse flake colors,
like 1963 Sebring Silver but still not coarse
flake by todays metallic standards - No two metallic cars of the same color look
alike, even those painted from the same batch of
paint, because of all the variables (painter
spray technique, humidity, temperature, paint
supplier differences, time between steps, etc) - You cannot judge a metallic color against a
standard paint chip (no such thing as standard) - There is an acceptable factory range of shades
and looks within all metallic colors
22Paint Judging
- The purpose of NCRS Flight Judging is to
determine how closely a vehicle appears to
conform to the NCRS Judging Standard and to
recognize such vehicles and their owners with
NCRS awards, when earned, that generally reflect
the current degree of preservation and/or
restoration. In addition, the purpose shall
include the judges transfer of knowledge to the
owner on how that owner may further improve their
car to more directly match this Standard.
23Paint Judging
- Cars are to be judged to the standard of vehicle
appearance, and as equipped, at the time and
point of final assembly by the Chevrolet Motor
Division of General Motors Corporation.
Presentation judging is to be in the condition
normally associated with that of a Corvette which
has undergone the then standard current Chevrolet
Dealer New Car Preparation for delivery to the
purchaser, exclusive of any dealer or purchaser
inspired addition, deletion, or changes.
24Paint Color JudgingStandard Deduction Guidelines
- Body Color Originality 85
- Note there is no Condition scoring for Color
- No Originality Deduction Color corresponds to
the factory installed body trim tag color code,
if applicable. The shade and the metallic
content and/or size, if applicable, is consistent
with that applied by the factory. - Deduct 20 of Originality Color corresponds to
the factory installed body trim tag if
applicable. However, the color shade is not
consistent with the color shade applied by the
factory.
25Paint Color JudgingStandard Deduction Guidelines
- Deduct 50 of Originality Color corresponds to
the factory installed body trim tag color code,
if applicable. However metallic content and/or
size, if applicable, is not consistent with the
metallic size/content applied at the factory. - Deduct 100 of Originality Color of side panel
cove depression, hood stinger, and/or hardtop is
a non-factory color, and unavailable factory
color combination, or is applied in an
inappropriate year of manufacture. - Deduct 100 of Originality Color does not
correspond to the factory installed body trim tag
color code, if applicable, or is a non-factory
color, or is a factory color applied in an in
appropriate year of manufacture.
26Paint Material/Application JudgingStandard
Deduction Guidelines
- Body Paint Originality 45 Condition 40
- No Originality Deduction
- Deduct 20 of Originality
- Deduct 50 of Originality
- Deduct 100 of Originality
- These are documented in the NCRS Judging
Reference Manual - See new Judging Flow Chart Standard Deduction
27NCRS Paint Flowchart(This flowchart addresses
Body Paint originality scoring)
With the doors, hood, and trunk closed Does the
Body Paint Material appear to be the Factory
Applied Material?
Material
Yes
No
Is the Appearance consistent with Factory
Application Methods?
Is the Appearance consistent with Factory
Application Methods? (Observe Door Jambs, Hood
ledge, Trunk Area)
Application
Yes
Yes
No
No
Deduct 0
Deduct 20
Deduct 50
Deduct 100
(Over/Under- Restored or Paint on
trim/weatherstrip)
Note Consult NCRS Judging Reference Manual for
more detail under each category
28Judging Guidance
- Paint Material Area
- Judging does not care what the paint material
actually is. Judging is only focused on what the
appearance of the paint material is. - The determination of material shall be by
appearance only. The practice of using polish or
compound to produce evidence is not conclusive
and may produce erroneous results. NCRS highly
discourages this practice.
29Judging Guidance
- Factory applied methods area
- Refer to the appropriate NCRS Technical
Information and Judging Guides for any specific
info on factory application methods. - Evaluate the body paint for excessive orange peel
and could possibly have overspray in areas are
typical for that year of application. - Evaluate paint application in difficult-to-polish
areas, which should not have as much DOI and
luster as exterior top side areas - Non-Lacquer (Enamels or Urethanes) tend to build
up on edges, valleys, and corners, giving the
appearance of being dipped or excessively painted - The application of clear lacquer tends to create
an unrealistic bright luster and depth to the
body paint - Shiny is a different concept than DOI DOI
is an area that Judging looks for, Shininess is
not.
30Judging Guidance
- See Section 3, part 9 of the Judging Reference
Manual which defines the proper Originality
Scoring method - Corvette Paint is Judged with this method in mind
as well - Successful Judging does not mean that you
determine if the paint is actually that which was
applied by the Factory. Successful Judging means
that you have determined if the Paint appears or
does not appear that it could have been - Generally, a component part judged to appear as a
complete original item will receive full
originality scoring credit, regardless of
condition