If you're not too sick of my details, I thought I'd post how I like to paint race car parts. My overall philosophy is to have the least amount of paint on chassis and suspension parts so that it's easy to see cracks and flaws on anything. I also want just enough paint to keep things from rusting. I like glossy paint because it's easier to clean. I like light colors because they make it easy to see fluid leaks and find things when dropped. I like the paint to stick well enough so that it doesn't peel off when we clean it, but does come off fairly easily the next time we blow the car apart for inspection and paint. So my go-to formula for years has been one coat of quality epoxy gray primer with 1-2 coats of cheap urethane clear.
My favorite epoxy has been PPG's DP series, which keeps evolving with environmental regulations but still works well. I mix it 2:1:1 as directed. Two parts DP50 LV, 1 part catalyst (DP401LV), and 1 part of a cheap urethane 870 series reducer (barely seen in the background). I let it dry 1 hour, then cover it with the cheapest private label urethane clear from my local paint supplier. That's mixed 4:1 with its catalyst, no reducer. For small parts, I use my trusty 30-year-old touch up gun at about 35 psi. It has about a 2-3" pattern that wastes very little paint. Sometimes I will break out an HVLP touch up or regular gun, but I still like the old school siphon guns I grew up with for these types of jobs.
I put fresh paper down on my painting areas. People ask me why not just paint on the boards underneath or the saw horses. I used to do that, and the paint would build up, then contaminate the next thing I paint. So that's why. Plus, it just feels cleaner overall and cleanliness counts. Speaking of clean, I clean the parts at least three times with a medium evaporating grease and wax remover (private label from my paint supplier). I spray my first coat medium wet so it doesn't have any dry spray, but also dries quickly.
After about 30 minutes, I flip my parts to paint the other side. I try to strategically paint the sides so that when I flip them, there is minimum contact with the paper and therefore little damage if the paint sticks. I'll often space the parts up with some 1/4" nuts or blocks of wood or nails into the board below to keep the parts from sticking down. By the way, I love those old hand-cut Zink pieces that were stick-welded together. They wouldn't look great on Instagram, but have held up just fine all these years.
Then I paint the other side of the parts.
After the primer dries for 60 minutes (at about 65-68 degrees in the shop), I repeat the process with the clear. I again strategically plan the "flips" so that the most-seen sides are up for the last coat and there is little contact with the table or saw horses. In this case, the beam is sitting on nuts. Also the nuts are placed where the beam contacts the frame, so any nicks in the paint are covered up.
The picture doesn't do it full justice as the gloss is very nice. I really like the color as well.
My last detail is that I always wipe out the lip of the can before carefully sealing it back up. If there is paint build-up in the lip, it may not seal well and wreck the remaining paint at $108 a quart (thanks supply chain). I used less than 1/4 of the quart for this job thanks to my touch-up gun.
Anyway, TL;DR, the brackets and chassis bits were all painted this evening. Tomorrow night, it's the chassis itself. Please share your own methods if you have better ideas.
Last season, we ran the car with many of those parts wearing DP90, the black version of DP50, but no clear, so the finish was flat. It always looked terrible and was hard to clean. We're so excited to have these parts in glossy gray this year.
p.s. No powdercoating on race car parts for me. Too thick, too hard to see those pesky cracks or other damage.