89' JS550 Pain Probs. Haze in direct light?

550MonsteR

Nahmean?
Location
Idaho
Didn't know where else to put it, but here goes.

I'm painting/building an 89' JS550. So far I've been spray painting the ski, appliance enamel on bottom, Krylon Fuzion gloss black on top. The paint has cured for 4 days in my 60* garage and was very rough to the touch. I have since sanded down the roughness with 600, 1000, 1500 and a 3M rubbing compound to take out wetsanding scratches. The paint is super smooth and evenly coated, but there is a haze on it. Can anyone point me in the right direction for getting a real reflective, shiny surface?

I've tried using Liquid Glass, since it can be applied to non-clearcoated paints and it has helped some, but not enough to be substancial and make me done with the paint project! In indirect lighting, the paint is super shiny and very reflective, but once the sun or a halogen is directly on the surface, there's that haze. If I look eye-level with the painted surface and look down it, its very shiny in direct light, but once I look at it straight on the haze is there and annoying me!

Is there some sort of secret polish I can use for spray paint? Like I said, it is super smooth and feels like brand new fibreglass, but the haze is killing it. :frown:

Thanks in advance on any pointers.
 

550MonsteR

Nahmean?
Location
Idaho
I bought the ski for $75, I didn't want a mutli-hundred dollar paint job going on it. It actually looks better this morning. The liquid glass is helping quite a bit, hopefully next week there will be at least one semi warm sunny day so it can cure the liquid glass in the sun.

I never expected automotive finish, but I have gotten better results from rattlecans before.
 
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