if you are going do this on a car you must ensure that you key up the surface to be lacquered over.you could use 1500 grit and wet flat all the area or if the surface is smooth enough you could just scotch brite the surface with a grey scotch brite and soapy water.you must be careful when doing this that you do not break through the lacquer you are sanding because this will show through when lacquered
No, the solvents in lacquer are to hot and volatile. The lacquer will cause bubbling of the acrylic paint.
No, the solvents in lacquer are to hot and volatile. The lacquer will cause bubbling of the acrylic paint.
Be careful applying lacquer as a top coat over latex or water based paint. The paint will often "craze" (bubble or sag) when lacquer is applied to it.
Lacquer can cause the paint to bubble or crack due to the very hot solvent that is a part of lacquer. If you want a clear coat over paint, a better choice is spar varnish over oil base paint and arcylic urethane over latex.
Yes, it is .
scrape off the lacquer paint first. by means of sand paper #100-140 before applying the latex paint
Yes. But you can't do the reverse. So if your primer is lacquer-based you can spray an over-coat of enamel on the top.
NO. -It will not stick.
yes I've tried it before.
the fresh lacquer of paint on the wall dried quick.
Hammerite paint should not be lacquered. The two will react adversely causing the paint to soften, bubble and crinkle.
Lacquer thinner evaporates quicker. It is cleaner or leaves less of a film than paint thinner. Lacquer thinner will thin most solvent based paint but paint thinner shouldn't be used to thin Lacquer. Lacquer dries from the surface painted out and enammal dries from the surface of the paint down to the surface painted. Using the wrong thinner affects how the paint dries and may affect the final finish.