ColoRyan said:
Thanks for all the replies and suggestions. I accept the fact the only proper way to do it is take it off. I am curious though, has anyone actually seen what happens when you leave on or paint over an un-activated 2k product? It's not worth the risk to me but I'm wondering if there have been people that have forgotten to activate and didn't realize till they did their base or clear.
It has happened thousands of times, hundreds of thousands of times.
I have seen it, I have done it. This is it in a nutshell, remove it.
If you were to apply a coat of product without hardener and then apply another coat over the top with hardener in it there is a "chance" that the solvents in the new coat will soak into the first coat that had no hardener and introduce some to the first coat.
This is in theory and a gamble anyway you look at it.
So, there is that option to "outsmart" the product after you make a mistake. It is the "bestest" you can do really. The BEST thing would be to remove it and apply it properly. But in the real world, applying another coat with the proper hardener may be an option. It all comes down to another factors in expectations.
The thing is, think about it, if your mixing ratio is 2:1 and you apply this second coat of product with the proper 2:1 ratio there isn't nearly enough hardener to activate the first coat. But it is better than nothing.
Once the first coat flashes off, you have a sheet of non barrier film that solvents can get thru or under. So applying another coat of something over it, be it the same stuff or something different you have a VERY good chance of it lifting or wrinkling.
It comes down to YOUR expectations. If this is "just a driver" and "not worth much" I personally would probably throw the dice and spray it again after a good scuff and see how it goes.
It isn't any worse than if you sprayed lacquer primer and now painted over it. that isn't the best thing to do but we shot a hell of a lot of cars years ago before the urethane primers came out like that, the paint didn't fall on the ground the first time we drove it.
Give it a shot IF your expectations are low as it sounds they are. You are learning, this is a lesson. If it fails, you will learn and if it doesn't you will learn.
Brian