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I have used Bondaprimer in the process of car restoration for many years. It has excellent rust inhibiting properties. It adheres well and needs only a light coat to provide protection. It is very tolerant of welding and is better as a 'weld-through' primer than many products made specifically for that purpose. A particularly good aspect is that it reacts with nearly no other paint systems I've encountered: cellulose, acrylic and two-pack are all fine. It's also stable and adherent under body fillers. The only reaction I've ever found with it is with POR15 and possibly with Hammerite.
When brushed, it creeps well making it useful for seams. Bondaprimer is not intended to be a filler primer and it is not. It has no thickness to allow sanding or flattening with wet and dry. For that it would need overcoating with a build primer.
I don't know that Bondaprimer was ever intended for automotive use but it's versatile and serves a variety of purposes round the workshop. Paint shops will usually say that the base for automotive refinishing must be an etch primer but Bonda, in my experience, does just a well.
Rating: [5 of 5 Stars!] |
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