TractorGuy
Elite Member
- Joined
- Sep 15, 2013
- Messages
- 4,616
- Location
- N. FL
- Tractor
- John Deere 4410, John Deere 4120, Kubota LX3310 cab, John Deere F725 Front Mount Mower, Swisher 60" pull behind mower. John Deere 4310 CUT (sold), Ford New Holland 575E Cab Backhoe (sold).
Wife bought me some new hood decals and a front lens for Christmas. She didn't understand you can't just stick new stuff on an old faded tractor. I put them on the shelf till I could get around to painting it.
I used the Rustoleum brand Farm Equipment paint in aerosol cans. Took 4 cans of green and 2 cans of yellow with a little left over from each color. I wet sanded the whole thing with 320 grit and wiped it down with rubbing alcohol right before spraying it. I am very impressed with how the paint went on and looked. Rustoleum dries slow so you need a bright sunny day to use it or it will remain tacky too long. I have tried using it in the garage a couple of times and it will stay tacky for 2 days or longer depending on the weather but in 90* sunlight it will cure in a few hours. The upside however is it doesn't dry so fast you get those dry streaks like you do using fast drying aerosol paints.
Tip: If you paint your tractor make sure to have compressed air available to blow out the grill while it's wet. Paint will dull a little but it keeps it from clogging the holes. Mine had been painted before I got it and 50% of the grill holes were clogged. Took several sandblastings and some digging with a sharp object to get most of the holes open before I repainted it.
Here are before pics.
And here it is during the process
And the final product
I used the Rustoleum brand Farm Equipment paint in aerosol cans. Took 4 cans of green and 2 cans of yellow with a little left over from each color. I wet sanded the whole thing with 320 grit and wiped it down with rubbing alcohol right before spraying it. I am very impressed with how the paint went on and looked. Rustoleum dries slow so you need a bright sunny day to use it or it will remain tacky too long. I have tried using it in the garage a couple of times and it will stay tacky for 2 days or longer depending on the weather but in 90* sunlight it will cure in a few hours. The upside however is it doesn't dry so fast you get those dry streaks like you do using fast drying aerosol paints.
Tip: If you paint your tractor make sure to have compressed air available to blow out the grill while it's wet. Paint will dull a little but it keeps it from clogging the holes. Mine had been painted before I got it and 50% of the grill holes were clogged. Took several sandblastings and some digging with a sharp object to get most of the holes open before I repainted it.
Here are before pics.
And here it is during the process
And the final product