Dean
Promoted Users
Bingo..i saw this today.What I imagine happened is the edge was lifting the lacquer, and not the epoxy. Thinner softened the lacquer, swelled the scratches, and didn't soften the epoxy. Two different materials next to each other tend to do that, especially something as different as lacquer and epoxy.
I had a spot on the side and can see the elevation diff from original laquer to our epoxy...if tgat makes sence. Tge line horizontaly showed us tge laquer loiked raised compared to epoxy side, not ebough tgat i could feel it but i could see the raised edges.
From now on we will be priming full panels if using old laquers to prevent this, or at least seal whole panels before painting, personaly not a fan of using sealers unless i realy have to. Ratger spend my time on metal work and fillers to not burn through.
My next project was done in base clear so shouldnt be any issues..