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Painting a snowboard


Guest gabrielo

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I am working on trying to clean up a few topsheets, and this is the info I got from Chris at Prior:

"Hi Dave, honestly I don't know the chemical make up of the material.

The art is sublimated into the plastic, actually steamed into it. The

process works as follows, the art is screen printed onto a paper, the

paper is positioned on top of the plastic and transferred into it under

high heat and pressure. It would take a considerable amount of time and

having the correct tools to resurface the top sheet. If willing I would

recommend the following. Sand the top down evenly with 220 wet paper,

move onto 320 or even 400 wet, don't sand to deep as the art is steamed

into the plastic 1/3 of the total thickness. Sand the surface, wash it

with acetone or an equivalent solvent and spray the clear urethane over

that. Tape around the board to prevent unnesissray clean up issues.

From what little I know about urethanes they are toxic, and are

frequently used in the car industry. If you go forward keep in touch

and let me know how it all goes. You can always call me toll free if

you need to discuss. Cheers,"

there was another before that but I cant find it.

basically you need to find something that will STICK. I just wanted to put a new clearcoat on a couple boards, but I have one that needs paint, too.

In doing my research I found that clothing dye (like RIT) will work, but you have to get it to boiling, and that stuff is MESSY and dangerous at high temps.

There are now spray paints that are for plastic...those might work.

I tried some 3M sign vinyl last year, but it got brittle in the cold and came off in one run. bummer.

there are also plastic dyes available but Im not sure how those work

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I meant to ask for guidance on painting the deck of a snowboard.

How was your trip? Tell us about it.

What board are going to paint? Someone giving you a hard time about your red, white and blue top sheet overseas?

Must be nice to be retired! Good to have you back safe and sound.

Carry on! Bryan

PS> Tim did a beautiful job of painting his "Hot" white and hot rod red/orange. I believe he used auto paint. I would imagine following good auto body re-finishing techniques would get it done. HINT: Put down more paper than you think! The overspray can drift and ruin your deck, sidewalk etc.

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I've seen many custom paint jobs done on snowboards using automotive finishes and they've turned out beautifully! Also, very durable. Like coating or finishing pretty much anything else, good prep is key! I'll talk to my dad and point him to this thread - this man knows his stuff!

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  • 2 years later...

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