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As the title says, today I started my troop seat project.
I acquired a really nice set of fiberglass troop seats a while back as the wooden ones on my truck were falling apart. My truck already had/has a new fiberglass headboard installed, so I figured I would do fiberglass all the way around. Thanks to Lex_Ordo for doing the leg work and finding the manufacturer of the troop seats and related products for the military, I was able to purchase the 4 headache rack planks I needed to complete the set. I could have bought the entire sideboard/rack assembly, but since I'm cheap and my uprights were in pretty good shape, I decided to just buy the planks and save the money.
Today I started sandblasting and re-painting the uprights for the final assembly. After I sandblasted everything down to bare metal, I hung them up and painted the lower parts (the parts hidden down inside the stake pockets) with some Ensign 395a frame and chassis paint. It's too bad that the only color they sell it in is gloss black, if they made it in a flat 383 green, I'll bet a bunch of guys would abandon the CARC and use this stuff...it's incredible stuff. Tough as nails and wears like iron. I painted the underside of my lawn mower deck with it back in the spring, and after a summer of cutting grass, and pressure washing every week, kicking up stones and scalping the uneven parts of the yard the stuff looks as good as the day I put it on. Whatever chemicals they put in this stuff bonds to and actually etches into the matal like nothing I've ever seen before.
Anyway, I figured since the lowers are hidden in the stake pockets it would be good to do them with the 395a to help protect them for years to come. I bought some good Sherwin Williams rattlecans of red oxide industrial primer/rust preverter to prime everything else with and then a topcoat of Rapco 383 green in the rattlecans is in order. That should help keep them looking good until I can get the truck ready to be repainted.
I acquired a really nice set of fiberglass troop seats a while back as the wooden ones on my truck were falling apart. My truck already had/has a new fiberglass headboard installed, so I figured I would do fiberglass all the way around. Thanks to Lex_Ordo for doing the leg work and finding the manufacturer of the troop seats and related products for the military, I was able to purchase the 4 headache rack planks I needed to complete the set. I could have bought the entire sideboard/rack assembly, but since I'm cheap and my uprights were in pretty good shape, I decided to just buy the planks and save the money.
Today I started sandblasting and re-painting the uprights for the final assembly. After I sandblasted everything down to bare metal, I hung them up and painted the lower parts (the parts hidden down inside the stake pockets) with some Ensign 395a frame and chassis paint. It's too bad that the only color they sell it in is gloss black, if they made it in a flat 383 green, I'll bet a bunch of guys would abandon the CARC and use this stuff...it's incredible stuff. Tough as nails and wears like iron. I painted the underside of my lawn mower deck with it back in the spring, and after a summer of cutting grass, and pressure washing every week, kicking up stones and scalping the uneven parts of the yard the stuff looks as good as the day I put it on. Whatever chemicals they put in this stuff bonds to and actually etches into the matal like nothing I've ever seen before.
Anyway, I figured since the lowers are hidden in the stake pockets it would be good to do them with the 395a to help protect them for years to come. I bought some good Sherwin Williams rattlecans of red oxide industrial primer/rust preverter to prime everything else with and then a topcoat of Rapco 383 green in the rattlecans is in order. That should help keep them looking good until I can get the truck ready to be repainted.
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