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68 Camaro SS396 Blackout Tailpan

Started by curtis0916, November 04, 2018, 10:43:49 PM

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69Z28-RS

All the illumination is from Overhead in Bryon's photo, so that is a big reason you're not seeing any sheen from the tail pan...
09C 69Z28-RS, 72 B 720 cowl console rosewood tint
69 Corvette, '60 Corvette, '72 Corvette
90 ZR1 red/red #246, 90 ZR1 white/gray #2466
72 El Camino, '55-'56-'57 Nomads, '55-'57 B/A Sedan

bcmiller

Possibly. But look at the quarter panel. :)
Bryon / 1968 Camaro SS 396 coupe - now old school 468 big block
1967 Camaro RS/SS 396 coupe L35/M40 - project
Looking for 68 Camaro with body # NOR 181016

bertfam

Are we REALLY going to start this again???

Ed

cook_dw

I removed my post.  Had a relapse for a moment and then realized I do not want to be apart of the dead horse beating again.

bcmiller

So far it's been a civil discussion. Let's keep it that way.
Bryon / 1968 Camaro SS 396 coupe - now old school 468 big block
1967 Camaro RS/SS 396 coupe L35/M40 - project
Looking for 68 Camaro with body # NOR 181016

cook_dw

For the record my post was civil and only a photo.   But the point (and I assume Ed's point) is this will never have a definite resolution.  I agree with others in the past; depending on the time of year and the applicator the "sheen" will differ from car to car.  Also am I correct in assuming that photo you posted is from an auto show of some sort or dealership floor?

bcmiller

December 1966 auto show.

It's not full gloss - otherwise the sheen on the rest of the car would vary during the year too. I am not buying that thinking. Production line temperatures could not have varied by much.
Bryon / 1968 Camaro SS 396 coupe - now old school 468 big block
1967 Camaro RS/SS 396 coupe L35/M40 - project
Looking for 68 Camaro with body # NOR 181016

cook_dw

Wouldn't the car then have "show paint" not really a fair comparison to standard everyday production paint jobs.?.

bcmiller

We don't know if it had show paint - and I only posted to see what the tailpan shows on a new car back in the day.
Bryon / 1968 Camaro SS 396 coupe - now old school 468 big block
1967 Camaro RS/SS 396 coupe L35/M40 - project
Looking for 68 Camaro with body # NOR 181016

cook_dw


Mike S

 Wilburrrr............. it may be an old topic, but still worth discussing  :)
Remember this thread and my reply #24.
http://www.camaros.org/forum/index.php?topic=16070.msg144790#msg144790

The covered blackout on the 04B LOS seen first light the day of these photos. Looks semi-gloss. But maybe LOS used different gloss than NOR.

67 04B LOS SS/RS L35 Hardtop - Original w/UOIT
67 05B NOR SS/RS L35 Convertible - Restored

KurtS

I recall JohnZ stating that there were only 2 blacks in the main paint booth. Gloss and less gloss.
Kurt S
CRG

bcmiller

Kurt yes I agree. I have his old post from TC stored somewhere on my laptop. I need to find that.
Bryon / 1968 Camaro SS 396 coupe - now old school 468 big block
1967 Camaro RS/SS 396 coupe L35/M40 - project
Looking for 68 Camaro with body # NOR 181016

maroman

At that time bodies were being painted in lacquer. So is it possible they were painted with regular lacquer paint but with little prep time or skill, because so few cars were getting this treatment, and that is the reason for the variation? They obviously were not buffed. Does anyone know where on the line were the black panels painted?
Doug  '67 RS/SS 396 auto I know the car since new

Petes L48

It's in JohnZ's research report article on first gen assembly process, under Fisher Body - Paint Shop Operations section, next to last paragraph.