I'm spraying my surfboard black. I wet sanded a bit too aggressively or with too low a grit after my first coat and the sand marks are showing through the second coat. Should I wet sand at a high grit? Or will the matte clear coat cover the marks? Maybe buff it? I can add another coat but would prefer not to add too much unnecessary weight.
>painting your board black
>making your board look even more like a seal
enjoy your shark bite
>>1072528
I've surfed with spinner, reef, hammerhead, and tiger sharks, and anything else that I haven't seen. Worst thing that happened was a guy next to me got bumped. Still freaked me out so I read up on them. They have pretty good vision but rely on smell and their electrical organ more. Visually though, they're more attracted to white and reflective colors.
Ask me anything about sharks. Also see a lot of turtles, seals, and Dolphins. Whales off in the distance.
>>1072676
Have you ever fucked a shark? Do their pussies look like a dolphins?
>>1072681
Yes and no
>>1072682
Oh wow I had to look that up. It's way fatter than I thought it would be.
I just wet sanded with a finer grain and it looks good. I was worried since the sanding marks were on the first coat and I've never had that happen before, but wet sanding is forgiving.
>>1072528
That would be yum yum yellow. What black gets you is a lot of melted wax and higher chance at delamination. But, OP is on the right track. Just be sure to get a clear coat over it.
>>1072956
This is one of the basics of abrasives. Use a rough grit to remove the most material, then work your way up to progressively remove the damage the previous grit did until you have an acceptable surface.