It depends on the size of the vehicle. Something mid-size maybe 2-3 qts depending on how many coats you do. For larger vehicles maybe a gallon or more of spray-able material. That is your paint+reducer.
Put it into an equation, {The surface area of the specified car}÷{12 square meters per litre} which gives you the required paint
A good paint gun, not something from the Walmart tool department.
A compressor adequate enough to run your gun without stopping--min 5HP.
A range of sandpaper down to 220-400, depending on the primer specs.
Surface clearner--not gasoline or paint thinner. Something compatible w/primer.
Primer--Etching primer for bare metal. Then either sandable primer or primer/sealer, depending on the condition of your old finish.
A base coat system
A compatilble clear coat system, unless you use a single stage base. Clear coats make life sooo much easier. Easier to get gloss without runs than single stage base coats.
Thinner & hardeners for primer, base, clear
Mixing jars and something to measure proportions
Paint strainers
Tack rags
Research! If you never did this...research, research, research. You get one shot. Don't screw it up because you were not prepared. Research starts with what gun you will choose, and ends with the paint system you choose. In between, you need to know how to prep a car and the basics of how to apply paint.
Practice, practice, practice. Paint the neighbor's wheel barrow; your aunt Tilly's lawn chairs; just don't paint anything of your own if you value it ;-) Don't even THINK of practicing on your car. It's sorta' like practicing parachute jumping--you need to get it perfect the first time!
A garage--you need a clean place to paint. Not your driveway. By the time the dust and bugs get through with you, you will realize how much time you just wasted on all of the above. You need good lighting too!
If you are a DIY'er, go for it. It's not rocket-science, but the research and practice are a MUST or you will make a mess. Two tips: 1) prep work is as important as painting. 2) You must be detail oriented as you learn your paint system (prep work, mixing, matching components, temperature). Do EXACTLY what it tells you!
BTW, if you have to buy everything from the top down, figure on dropping around a grand if you shop around. Still chearper than sending it out.
Body shops usually have a "paint booth" a room where lots of filtered air is pumped through to keep it ventilated and free of dust particles.
You will find paint specifically formulated for cars at auto supply shops and, quite often, in hardware stores.
TAKE IT TO MAACO
alot of paint......
155.6/how much paint will I need
we need more info, what type of paints, Most if basecoats are one to one
you need to mix equal parts car paint and reducer really well. then transfer the mixture to a paint gun.
To Paint a car red will be expensive. Red is the most expensive automotive color paint.
it depends how much gals do u get..
about 20 dollars to buy it
Pint should do it
u need to type the car and the matching color
form_title= Airbrush Paint form_header= Use airbrush paint in your home. What color paint do you need?*= _ [50] What will you be painting?*= _ [50] How much paint do you need?*= _ [50]
form_title= Whiteboard Paint form_header= Write on your whiteboards. What color paint do you need?*= _ [50] Do you need any special accessories?*= () Yes () No How much paint do you need?*= _ [50]
form_title= Appliance Paint form_header= Paint your appliances to match your home. What color paint do you need?*= _ [50] How much paint do you need?*= _ [50] Do you have a brand preference?*= () Yes () No
when do you unlock paint