Ok, back to original topic. I am a home hobby car guy that has been restoring cars for over 45 years. I started when I was 15 and am now 62. Each car along the way I became better at the work. Here is what I’ve learned:
1. Frame, drive train, brakes, fuel, etc is very easy. Just about anybody with the right tools, a small work area, and now more than ever, access to YouTube can rebuild to a high quality the mechanics.
2. Electrical is a bit more intimidating at first but after doing a few complete harness kits, numerous add ins, and learning how to truly use a volt meter (especially, ohms), anybody can do electrical.
3. Interior is perhaps the easiest, even if you’re installing new hog ringed upholstery. Now, however, most folks are just buying everything new and bolting it in. No biggy and anybody can do it.
4. Now the the body and paint. What the original post points out is that materials cost wayyyy more than people think or budget. It’s not just the crazy cost of high quality paint, but all of the other items he mentions. The 600 hours of body work is no joke. But he leaves out one major thing. That’s 600 hours of body work by people who know what they are doing, have likely spent years doing body work every day as a profession, and know how to do it right. That cannot be learned on YouTube! The other issue is the skill of actually painting the truck. Sure, you can get the purple gun from HF and lay down a nice single stage that looks great from 5 feet or so. But there WILL be orange peal, fish eyes, and dirt in the paint. Great for a true truck used in the mountains, but not if you’re building a show car. To do it right, it’s a two stage BC/CC job followed by at least another 40 hours of cut and buff. If you’ve never cut and buffed a car, be prepared to burn through the clear and base and ruin that area of the paint job.
So here’s my point, I believe everything can be done to show quality level by the home hobbiest given enough time, tools, and the internet. However, the one exception is the body work and paint. I’ve been doing body and painting my own classics for many years and I am still an amateur. My final product is show quality, but at the bottom end of that category.
So yes, the cost of a show paint job is high, but the cost goes way beyond just the dollars…it costs you years of practice, tons of mistakes, and the knowledge that you’ll likely never get it right. But hey, it’s the challenge that keeps us doing this!