Home › Forums › Pavement Striping Materials › i need to find a Faster way to lay-out handicaps
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March 5, 2010 at 12:04 am #5442AnonymousInactive
I have been trying to find a faster way to lay-out handicaps i have been laying down the stencil and taping around it but when you got 8 or more its not so fast
March 9, 2010 at 4:06 pm #5980AnonymousInactiveUse boards.. much faster
March 10, 2010 at 7:33 am #5982AnonymousInactivedo you get a lot of build up or dripping. and are you talking about like 2×4
March 10, 2010 at 4:53 pm #5983AnonymousInactiveYeah 2×4 is good should’nt too much overspray on them athe scrape the excess off at the end and keep for next time.
March 14, 2010 at 10:33 pm #5985AnonymousInactiveAll right thanks
May 5, 2010 at 8:58 pm #6051AnonymousInactiveHi Guys,
Here’s how I do ADA Blue & Whites.
I use a 300′ cotton clothes line on a reel and carpenter’s chalk (it looks like half a moon) in my hand for all my snapping, just drag your line through the chalk as you unreel it. Get a helper or a bigfoot on wheels to attach your line to.
1. Snap the backups, (across the ends of the stall lines). You need to do this anyway so it’s not extra work.
2. Measure and tag the center of the stall on your backup line.
3. Measure and tag the height of your stencil at the first and last stall line.
4. Snap the line across all the stalls.
5. Put your stencil down at your center mark and trace each side with your chalk.
6. Roll it with a roller on a broom handle. Keep a five 1/2 – 3/4 full with blue paint. Leave the roller in the paint forever. When finished, unscrew the handle, replace the lid and you’re done.
7. When dry, throw down your stencil and paint the guy in the chair.
8. I like to paint the white border just like on the posted signs. I do all the tops and bottoms in one pass, then go up and down each side. Zoom!
Keep your pail close to the chalk line so any drips fall inside the square.
If it will be just a few, center the stencil and trace the whole thing instead of snapping.
The only reason for spraying blue is if you have blue lines to paint. For that I use a separate tank on my conventional machine. I never switch colors.
If it’s over new asphalt, do two coats as the paint can sometimes lift the oil from the asphalt when you roll. The second coat will cover it and it’s needed on new stuff anyway.
This method is fast, easy and looks great.
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Here’s the order of the job.
1. Paint the center lines on all your double bays first so they can be drying.
2. Layout the ADA’s and hash areas.
3. Paint the hash areas and stall lines around your ADA’s so they can be dying. You do not want tire tracks on your nice new blue.
4. Paint the blue.
5. Go do your head in stalls. Then the double bays.
6. Come back and finish the ADA’s.
Cool, Charlie
May 6, 2010 at 12:33 am #6052AnonymousInactiveI found another pic that illustrates the idea!
Charlie
Denver, ColoradoMay 6, 2010 at 12:36 am #6053AnonymousInactiveAnd some white/blue ones in did in Florida.
Charlie
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