Help with painting raised white lettering on tires

Mannix

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6 weeks ago, I spent five (5) hours carefully painting the raised lettering on four (4) truck tires with bright white acrylic paint...hey, acrylic won't come off your hands right? So it will surely stick to rubber, right? Well, it is already chipping off in pieces....???? What in the hell do I need to be using exactly??? Any thoughts would be appreciated...thx!!!
 
Why not just have the white lettering side of the tire mounted facing outward?
 
I've never pai
6 weeks ago, I spent five (5) hours carefully painting the raised lettering on four (4) truck tires with bright white acrylic paint...hey, acrylic won't come off your hands right? So it will surely stick to rubber, right? Well, it is already chipping off in pieces....???? What in the hell do I need to be using exactly??? Any thoughts would be appreciated...thx!!!
I've never painted rubber, but I assume oil based paint, possibly model paint would be the way to go. I'd just paint a block of wood and lay it across the letters, rather than painstakingly paint each letter.
 
You gotta scrub the tires clean. Letters have to be clean or the paint will not take. Take a degreaser if you have access to one and just apply to the raised letters. You should also rough the letters up a bit. Use a primer, try a Fusion All In One paint.
 
I have no experience with trying to accent tires with paint but I would think you need something with both very good adhesion and it would have to be pretty pliable when cured since the tires themselves are pliable and subject to extreme conditions.

I wonder if one of the vinyl wrap spray coatings would have the adhesion you need.
 
I'm not sure what to use next time...still trying to wrap my head around young Theodore Cleaver's suggestion.
 
-----Have you tried Googling it?

Yes...SA. Too many differed opinions...that is where I got the suggestion that I HAD to use Acrylic....which promptly chipped off.
 
-----Have you tried Googling it?

Yes...SA. Too many differed opinions...that is where I got the suggestion that I HAD to use Acrylic....which promptly chipped off.
Acrylic is water based and brittle, so I wouldn't expect it to last long. I think I'd try spray painting a piece of wood and transferring it to the letters. Spray paint seems to stick to anything.
 
the wood thing is good in theory, but pressing paint onto a surface and expecting it to adhere equally...doubtful
 
I've never heard of someone painting the tires. Normally they just buy the tires that way.

Maybe call a tattoo parlor? :muttley:
 
the white lettering turns yellow or brown over time and looks like crap
 
the wood thing is good in theory, but pressing paint onto a surface and expecting it to adhere equally...doubtful
How do you think the printing press worked? It may not have been wood, but the concept is the same. Glue a piece of felt to the wood if that helps.
 
6 weeks ago, I spent five (5) hours carefully painting the raised lettering on four (4) truck tires with bright white acrylic paint...hey, acrylic won't come off your hands right? So it will surely stick to rubber, right? Well, it is already chipping off in pieces....???? What in the hell do I need to be using exactly??? Any thoughts would be appreciated...thx!!!


Goto youtube

Type in vinyl tire letters
 
the white lettering turns yellow or brown over time and looks like crap
Oh, the letters are already white? Isn't there some type of cleaner on the market? I used to use a coarse brush on mine, but you have to go with the grain or it doesn't work very well.
 
So I've used this paint pen from Dupli-color several times and it is a good product. The paint does hold up pretty well. It will, however, depend on what you're using it on. When I had my sports car (that would see plenty of cornering action) the tires would get more flexing movement and it would crack the paint a bit. Still, it would hold onto the tire. With my truck, that I drive normal, the lettering holds up much better.

This pen does require some patience though. You literally have to dab the paint on all the lettering. It doesn't just color in like a marker. You should be able to find these at your local Autozone or O'reilly's. They are like $8. If that doesn't work or up to your standards the next move (which was mentioned above already) is ordering a vinyl lettering kit. You can get them in any size and wording you want and they hold up pretty good.

shw-ht100_xl.jpg
 
So I've used this paint pen from Dupli-color several times and it is a good product. The paint does hold up pretty well. It will, however, depend on what you're using it on. When I had my sports car (that would see plenty of cornering action) the tires would get more flexing movement and it would crack the paint a bit. Still, it would hold onto the tire. With my truck, that I drive normal, the lettering holds up much better.

This pen does require some patience though. You literally have to dab the paint on all the lettering. It doesn't just color in like a marker. You should be able to find these at your local Autozone or O'reilly's. They are like $8. If that doesn't work or up to your standards the next move (which was mentioned above already) is ordering a vinyl lettering kit. You can get them in any size and wording you want and they hold up pretty good.

shw-ht100_xl.jpg
Thread over.:thumbup:
 
nope...you more Q....thanks zero....will that pen work if the tires are on the vehicle, or do they have to be pulled and laying flat?
 
nope...you more Q....thanks zero....will that pen work if the tires are on the vehicle, or do they have to be pulled and laying flat?

Nope you can do it while they are on the vehicle. You may have to kneel/lay at weird angles or move the vehicle to get the angle you want. Just depends on what you're comfortable doing.
 

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