• Filler and sandable primer is suitable for use on wood, metal and fiberglass surfaces
  • Oil based 2 in 1 paint with Stops Rust formula saves time and provides rust resistant base coat for cars, trucks, and other vehicles
  • Covers up to 10 sq ft and dries to the touch (and can be recoated) in 10 minutes
  • Filler and sandable spray paint fills minor surface imperfections and sands smooth
  • Provides superior top coat adhesion and flat finish yields a smooth surface when sanded
  • The hi-build formula fills in minor imperfections
  • Sands smooth for the ultimate finish
  • 2 in 1 Primer features an advanced spray system that allows you to spray at any angle
  • A comfort spray tip with wider finger pad
  • Stops Rust formula

I've been using this primer for a few years for 3D printing, and am very happy with how it works! It adheres very well to unsanded PLA or ABS, and allows you to build up to a uniform, even surface quickly. For model-making, I use a few coats of this primer to build up a nice surface before sanding and giving the final coat. It dries quick, sands easy, and is a great value for the money. You can see some of the other materials I use by clicking on my name and checking out my other recommend products!

I'm using this on 3D prints and it works great. It will basically made anything printed at .2mm disappear. at .3mm the layers can still be seen, so you'll still need to do a few coats and lots of sanding. This stuff is awesome on PLA prints at .1mm really can't be beat.

Really helps smooth out minor level changes when doing auto body work. Used it to prime the bare metal before applying new paint when refinishing small rust spots on my 2006 VW Jetta. Easy to use and great price. Rustoleum products are definitely my go to.

I use this for finishing 3d printed props. Apply a few light coats and sand down as needed to obtain a smooth surface. Fills in gaps and ridges very easily.

I used this to refinished plastic door trim panels on a late model Ford Explorer that were sun baked, faded and had spider web cracks. Much better that covering up with the cheap vinyl stick ons or trying to buy new ones that are extremely overpriced. This filled in everywhere I needed it and was extremely easy to sand. Then applied a couple coats of black base coat and top coated with some gloss. Panels came out looking like new all over again.

This stuff is amazing for 3D prints. One coat of this plus a good sanding is enough to get rid of the lines completely, and it's a lot easier than an epoxy-based one like XTC3D.

Recently I acquired 8 Bruno Rey beech plywood dining chairs from the 1970's, and they were absolutely trashed. The factory lacquer was peeling off, big gaps in wood, chips, all kinds of delamination. I used this Primer/Filler on each chair - a whole can, and after 8 chairs figured out perfect method. I apply a good thick initial layer, wait 20 minutes max, and then lightly hit problem areas. It fills most stuff, a little wood filler and/or bondo and really good sanding does the trick. Dry sand, then very lightly wet sand to feather problem areas. IMPORTANT: RECOAT TIMES are everything with these products. You WILL get cracking, bubbling, and all kinds of adhesion problems if you don't heed recoat times and make sure NOTHING is on the surface. No left over mineral sprits, schtochbrite fibers, whatever you use. Basically you paint pretty much immediately, or wait 48 hours. It says sand in like 20 minutes (and you can) but let the primer cure, and you will be very satisfied with this product. Curing for me, 70 degree average with 50 percent humidity took about 48 hours. Be patient, I don't think 5 bucks a can is that cheap, but it will save you money in final coats in the long run. This stuff is gold, but has to be used right for best effect. 1 can primer, 2 cans paint, 1 can clear gloss made these chairs look perfect (I paid more for paint than I did the chairs, but it was well worth it). I'm talking wood, just wood here.

this will cover up layer lines in a few coats. even on fine detail, you think it will cover it up but it just raises the higher spots. it will look very thick after the first coat but that will evaporate and thin out so you will need a few coats.

This worked awesome on my car’s hood liner. It was stained and discolored before. I just sprayed off my hood liner, let it dry, and coated it in this, and it looked brand new. Seemed to stick well, it wasn’t rubbing off on me. It did take almost 10 coats. I’m impatient and did them all back to back, without any problems. It kept wanting to clog up on me, it’s output would drop like crazy, so I had to keep shaking it up and changing my angle to keep a relatively consistent spray.

I prepared the surface and had a base coat down, at first application appeared wonderful! Then in just a few minutes the product cracked and left alligatoring all through out the part! I had to start all over again. I did try the product on another similar material and it failed again. Not what was expected. Tried to contact seller, appears it is non-returnable item? Research this filler/primer before application, must have done something wrong?