I recently failed to complete my new airplane for the NATs, so I ended up needing to repair some dings acquired over the years on the old one, along with some intentional sand-throughs of the clear (to get rid of pink spots from raw fuel shortly before appearance judging at the 2011 NATs). The finish is Klass-Kote and K&B Superpoxy colors, and two-part polyurethane clear, as recommended by my 20-point buddies PTG and Uncle Jimby. Fixing the dings in the color was no real problem. The real issue was how to get rid of the overspray halos from airbrushing the clear.
There are two basic approaches - mask it off and spray to the line creating an edge, that is then sanded to feather out the edge. This works well when there is a good clear delineating edge, or color change. I did this on my turtledeck, clearing to the blue lines, then sanded it to feather it out, and polished it.
The harder part was where I had to just spot-clear it. I used an airbrush, masked off the area, but then feathered it with short of the mask. The result was a nice, shiny hard surface from the 8-year-old clear, a shiny dead-soft surface in the middle of the repair, and a halo of soft droplets. If you wait for the repair to dry, you end up trying to sand the pebbles and maybe go through the existing clear, or just end up leaving it with a visible halo. I had this happen on several previous repairs.
This time, I found a better solution. Waiting a grand total of about 2 hours after spraying and just as it was hard enough to keep from leaving fingerprints, I took 2000 sandpaper and medium rubbing compound and started working the edges. It was almost miraculous, it took the very soft halo droplets off like I was wiping a smudge off a car window, while leaving the underlying rock-hard clear with minimal scratches. The remaining solid repair are got pretty matte, so after I got the halo off, I stopped and waited until the next afternoon, then polished it normally, removing the slight scratches in the old area, shining up the matte area of the new repair, and cleaning up the rest of the overspray.
This all worked out great and the result was that even I, knowing exactly where to look, couldn't tell where the edges of the repaired clear were. They were in the worst possible place, right on the top of the wing in the dark red, where any mistake would stick out like a sore thumb. There was only one small spot where I went through the existing clear.
I was very impressed with the ease at which this all worked, so it might be worth a try if you have a similar situation. I would point out that this was with the airplane completely disassembled, cleaned, sanded and painted on a Monday about midnight, and I packed it in the car for the NATs Wednesday afternoon, and I wound up with 17 points, which kept me in the game for the rest of the week.
Brett