Is there some rule against painting the suspension? Or do they do they not simply to define what is bodywork and what is suspension?
Any thoughts are appreciated!
you know how many coats it takes to make a f1 car shiny like they do when they race first? It will atleast take 6 layers, and probably 1 or 2 chrome layers to make it shiny, and after that a few layers of blank paint to protect the paint from small rocks so it wont scratch. This all will at least take 10 layers if i took the ferrari, this all will take 20 kg, i am sure aboutt hat. And if you take a car like the mclaren it will be even more.RacingManiac wrote:actually I thought there was an article a while back saying that Renault's paint job weighs ~ 6KG. Which is still quite a bit considering the nature of the series and the length people go to for weight saving. But still substantially less than 20kg....
My guess is the same as Dave's, that it might hide flaws on those more critically designed parts.
F1Technical article on F1 paint"... By the end of the process, the monocoque shouldn't have gained any more than 500 grams extra. We check that carefully when it gets back to the factory, because weight is such a critical parameter in F1."
where are you getting this from.wesley123 wrote:you know how many coats it takes to make a f1 car shiny like they do when they race first? It will atleast take 6 layers, and probably 1 or 2 chrome layers to make it shiny, and after that a few layers of blank paint to protect the paint from small rocks so it wont scratch. This all will at least take 10 layers if i took the ferrari, this all will take 20 kg, i am sure aboutt hat. And if you take a car like the mclaren it will be even more.RacingManiac wrote:actually I thought there was an article a while back saying that Renault's paint job weighs ~ 6KG. Which is still quite a bit considering the nature of the series and the length people go to for weight saving. But still substantially less than 20kg....
My guess is the same as Dave's, that it might hide flaws on those more critically designed parts.
2 basic coat
2 grey coats
2 black paintbrush coats
2 fluorising red coats
3 or more chrome layers
then still 3 protecting coats.
this all will take 14 layers of paint, this all will make the cars nicer so im sure it will take 25 kg of paint on the mclaren. After that, the car will be cleaned after every run so it looks better for the sponsors. You cant make the paint as nice as they are with only 2 kilos of paint, with that you will only make 1 layer of paint.
It is just a guess, in car programs i watch they use on hotrods at least 6-7 layers of paint, every colour that gets used is count as one layer. Basicly you can say the mclaren has 3 colours so that will be at least 3 layers.flynfrog wrote:where are you getting this from.wesley123 wrote:you know how many coats it takes to make a f1 car shiny like they do when they race first? It will atleast take 6 layers, and probably 1 or 2 chrome layers to make it shiny, and after that a few layers of blank paint to protect the paint from small rocks so it wont scratch. This all will at least take 10 layers if i took the ferrari, this all will take 20 kg, i am sure aboutt hat. And if you take a car like the mclaren it will be even more.RacingManiac wrote:actually I thought there was an article a while back saying that Renault's paint job weighs ~ 6KG. Which is still quite a bit considering the nature of the series and the length people go to for weight saving. But still substantially less than 20kg....
My guess is the same as Dave's, that it might hide flaws on those more critically designed parts.
2 basic coat
2 grey coats
2 black paintbrush coats
2 fluorising red coats
3 or more chrome layers
then still 3 protecting coats.
this all will take 14 layers of paint, this all will make the cars nicer so im sure it will take 25 kg of paint on the mclaren. After that, the car will be cleaned after every run so it looks better for the sponsors. You cant make the paint as nice as they are with only 2 kilos of paint, with that you will only make 1 layer of paint.
more like 1-2 coats of filler primer that gets wet sanded
maybe a sealer
2-3 coats of red
2-3 coats of clear that gets wet saned and buffed
also every thing but the clear coat goes on super thin
the filler primer can go on thick but gets sanded down quite a bit
here is a similar paint to Macas http://www.kustomrides.com/chromepaint.htm
it goes on a powder
some setups can be recycle
Thank you Scarbs. As always, very informative, and I appreciate your taking the time to answer.scarbs wrote:Suspension elements aren't painted as they are crack tested after each race. The paint would interfere with the ultrasound and accoutsic testing, while stripping the paint would only slow this already laborious process down.
Teams often wrap the suspension arms in clear tape, this prevent stones chipping the surface and causing failures. If they wanted colour then the tape could coloured rather than paint the arms.
An F1 car has very little paint. The teams use the minimum of filler over the bare carbon\resin surface. Then there's a primer coat and then a colour coat, That's it! The paint never fulyl cures and remains soft. In between races the paint is scraped off by hand, the part weighed to ensure all the paint's been taken off and then repainted.