Other than the stickers on that it looks really impressive. Some guys here are working on silk screening, and if they get it going, you can probably rip those stickers off and get some paint on there instead.
Got "schooled" by member shawn k on May 10th, 2011...
No longer really "in tune" with the audio industry, and probably have not been for some time.
Hands down the forum's most ignorant member...
Don't even know what Ohm's law is...
The carbon on these amps is the real stuff a friend done the for me. He lay the carbon over the case and then resined it. He then set about cutting all the holes out of it and then laqoured it. This is not the carbon sticker stuff you get it's the real deal it took a while to do but I think he done a top job. I'm not to keen on the stickers myself I am looking in to getting stenicls done and then paint the Phoenix gold logo on to the amps. I have the 900.7 a 1000.2 the dd5 and fuse and earth blocks all done so they make a complete system done in the custom carbon. Thanks for looking and giving your feeback
Alpine F#1 headunit
Alpine F#1 processor
Alpine F#1 screen
Morel supremos
Morel cdm 88 mids
Phoenix gold ti 9s
Phoenix gold ti 900.7
Phoenix gold ti 1000.2
stuartyp wrote:The carbon on these amps is the real stuff a friend done the for me. He lay the carbon over the case and then resined it. He then set about cutting all the holes out of it and then laqoured it. This is not the carbon sticker stuff you get it's the real deal it took a while to do but I think he done a top job. I'm not to keen on the stickers myself I am looking in to getting stenicls done and then paint the Phoenix gold logo on to the amps. I have the 900.7 a 1000.2 the dd5 and fuse and earth blocks all done so they make a complete system done in the custom carbon. Thanks for looking and giving your feeback
This is not real CF, you can't put real CF on this stuff.......it would have to be fired at such a temperature that it would melt those items. This is vinyl overlay. Real CF has to be fired inside of a mold to get the shape desired.
I think the fan grills need to be done, they look all sanded.
Real carbon fiber does not have to be "fired", it can be baked at lower temps to activate integrated resin, or it can be put on dry and coated with resin which will cure at room temps. It depends on where it is going and what it is doing.
I have no doubt these items were covered with a 1-ply layer of dry carbon fiber cloth, then coated with resin which saturated the cloth and bonded with the steel below.
Got "schooled" by member shawn k on May 10th, 2011...
No longer really "in tune" with the audio industry, and probably have not been for some time.
Hands down the forum's most ignorant member...
Don't even know what Ohm's law is...
stuartyp wrote:. He then set about cutting all the holes out of it and then laqoured it. This is not the carbon sticker stuff you get it's the real deal it took a while to do but I think he done a top job.
I can tell it's not the sticker stuff.
I tried doing some sample parts for someone in that stuff, and whilst it looks reasonably good, as soon as you lacquer/clearcoat over it the effect is totally lost.
I'm trying to get hold of an old contact of mine that would be able to sort borderless stickers out. He runs a graphics company in Sheffield (my home town) and with any luck ought to be able to scan an original amp and produce some solvent friendly stickers that I can clear over for that truly original look
stuartyp wrote:paintguy
mate did you flatten it down first then lacqur it thats how he does it
No. As I say it was just that carbon effect stick on stuff, which is completely different to what you have. It's just a vinyl with a surface that's ribbed in different directions to give the appearance of a carbon weave. As soon as you clear it you fill in these ribs, killing the effect.
I think I could cut most of that out with my vinyl cutter with the exception of the really small "demazes distrobution center" and you could use it as a mask for paint. The top one should be no problem, just the bottom part of the lower one.
what else can I say I am a grumpy asshole most of the time.
ttocs wrote:I think I could cut most of that out with my vinyl cutter with the exception of the really small "demazes distrobution center" and you could use it as a mask for paint. The top one should be no problem, just the bottom part of the lower one.
That's an even better idea than mine. A spray mask/stencil would allow me to airbrush in the lettering, making it look even more like the original screen printing