Couple of brief notes. Automotive clear (catalyzed polyurethane) is heavy. Not much solvents and very high in solids so what you shoot on is pretty much what you have. Dope is high in solvents and generally not very high in solids so of what you shoot on, more than half evaporates. One coat of automotive clear will equal 5 or 6 coats of butyrate clear. That's not necessarily a bad thing. You shoot one, even coat of catalyzed polyurethane and you're done. Probably add 2oz or so (for a 650 square inch plane). It would be the same for butyrate by the time you built up enough to rub out. You just have to go easy on the catalyzed products.
Weight of paints:
Keep in mind that butyrate colors have pigment, stabilizers and binders in them. As a consequence, they tend to be heavier. Also, weight will depend on the color you're using. White is quite heavy due to the amount of pigment. Black is relatively light since it doesn't take much pigment to cover. If you use automotive urethane based single stage colors, they tend to be very, very light. This is because there are no stabilizers in them. They depend on the clear topcoat to stabilize them. So what you get is mostly just pigment. On the other hand, they are very fragile until you get the topcoat on. I've wiped off a color with alcohol. It's a matter of what you want, I guess. Auto Air colors (water based urethane colors) are very light also and for much the same reason. The water evaporates and leaves just the toner (pigment). But again, they are very fragile. With both these urethane based colors, you have to us an intercoat between the color and top coat if you are going to do any inking or decals or whatever. They are also sensitive to taping, so an intercoat between base color and trim colors is advisable (and you start putting on weight). This is why I quite using automotive color coats. They ended up being as heavy or heavier than butyrate due to the intercoats.
Repair:
One of the things to note is repairing finishes that have possible incompatible layers is that it can be tricky. I generally use butyrate lacquer from wood up to topcoat the shoot catalyzed polyurethane. When repairing, you have to sand the top coat back past the repair and into the color coats of undisturbed paint. Do the repair and re-shoot the colors on the repaired area, then lightly sand the topcoat further back to rough it a bit. Then shoot new topcoat back onto the roughed up area. When done, empty the gun out and fill it with urethane reducer and shoot over the whole area lightly. This allows the new finish to integrate with the underlying paint. But go easy. You don't want to melt it,