- Jun 30, 2004
- 16,154
- 1,757
- 126
Our family of three retirees has two vehicles: My fabled 1995 Isuzu Trooper, and my brother's 1995 Nissan Pickup SE truck. We must be outside the window of what mainstream car owners think is normal, but I've always favored used vehicles, and I keep them until they either need a new engine or they fail to pass smog-test because of a completely unavailable part. My spreadsheet history of purchases and repair orders shows me saving money hand over fist.
The truck, with about 167,000 miles on the engine, is in great mechanical condition, but my brother can no longer drive it. It has manual transmission, and he's facing the risk of possible partial amputation of his clutch foot. We may want to sell it when I purchase a low-mileage pre-owned vehicle in what would be feasibly a cash-down transaction in maybe two years. But we need the second vehicle as a backup.
Since it's a 4WD truck, we'd expect to get "something" for it when sold. Our mechanic says we shouldn't take less than $3,000. But the cab-top needs rust-treatment and paint, the hood needs to be stripped, then Bondo-ed for a shallow dent with paint. Minor rust can be be treated and primered in remaining small areas.
The truck's original color is black -- which I hate -- especially in Southern California. But to save money on paint, I'm going to use the appropriate Nissan color-code in aerosol cans from Paintscratch.com for the cab-top and small spots. I may have to spend $130 for a pint each of primer, basecoat and clear, and use an HVLP sprayer for the hood. The remainder of the body panels and paint will probably look pretty good after application of some rubbing compound and an orbital buffer.
I can get a new hood for $150, but either way -- using fiberglass bondo for the dent if I don't replace it -- I'll need to primer and paint it. If I keep the old hood, I'll want to strip the paint and treat a square-foot of surface rust.
I've researched the rust-treatment strategies, and I've settled on using Black Star Rust Converter after grinding off the loose rust and removing any remaining paint.
Some advice on web-forum searches suggests using an Epoxy Primer as a final step before painting. I am still debating the need for this. The Black Star product may be totally adequate before applying Paintscratch primer, basecoat and clearcoat. But before I apply the final paint, I want to see if the rust mitigation is thorough.
Regular primer paint is porous, so one is advised not to use it on bare metal to then forestall painting while submitting it to wet weather.
Is Epoxy primer porous? I wouldn't think so, but seeking a second opinion.
Any alternative choices? Any thoughts about all this?
We're not going to shell out $1,900 to MAACO for the body repair and paint. I might consider spending $500 for chrome wheels (if that's possible) to anticipate a better sale price. But this is an old truck. Whoever would want it likely covets 4WD. The tires are new, the suspension is new. The engine doesn't use a drop of oil; the tranny seems to be great. I can honestly say the truck is "mechanic-owned and driven -- plus 5K miles added by latest owner".
The truck, with about 167,000 miles on the engine, is in great mechanical condition, but my brother can no longer drive it. It has manual transmission, and he's facing the risk of possible partial amputation of his clutch foot. We may want to sell it when I purchase a low-mileage pre-owned vehicle in what would be feasibly a cash-down transaction in maybe two years. But we need the second vehicle as a backup.
Since it's a 4WD truck, we'd expect to get "something" for it when sold. Our mechanic says we shouldn't take less than $3,000. But the cab-top needs rust-treatment and paint, the hood needs to be stripped, then Bondo-ed for a shallow dent with paint. Minor rust can be be treated and primered in remaining small areas.
The truck's original color is black -- which I hate -- especially in Southern California. But to save money on paint, I'm going to use the appropriate Nissan color-code in aerosol cans from Paintscratch.com for the cab-top and small spots. I may have to spend $130 for a pint each of primer, basecoat and clear, and use an HVLP sprayer for the hood. The remainder of the body panels and paint will probably look pretty good after application of some rubbing compound and an orbital buffer.
I can get a new hood for $150, but either way -- using fiberglass bondo for the dent if I don't replace it -- I'll need to primer and paint it. If I keep the old hood, I'll want to strip the paint and treat a square-foot of surface rust.
I've researched the rust-treatment strategies, and I've settled on using Black Star Rust Converter after grinding off the loose rust and removing any remaining paint.
Some advice on web-forum searches suggests using an Epoxy Primer as a final step before painting. I am still debating the need for this. The Black Star product may be totally adequate before applying Paintscratch primer, basecoat and clearcoat. But before I apply the final paint, I want to see if the rust mitigation is thorough.
Regular primer paint is porous, so one is advised not to use it on bare metal to then forestall painting while submitting it to wet weather.
Is Epoxy primer porous? I wouldn't think so, but seeking a second opinion.
Any alternative choices? Any thoughts about all this?
We're not going to shell out $1,900 to MAACO for the body repair and paint. I might consider spending $500 for chrome wheels (if that's possible) to anticipate a better sale price. But this is an old truck. Whoever would want it likely covets 4WD. The tires are new, the suspension is new. The engine doesn't use a drop of oil; the tranny seems to be great. I can honestly say the truck is "mechanic-owned and driven -- plus 5K miles added by latest owner".
Last edited: