Thanks, we try. Sometimes it takes more than one attempt..
I was blocking out the tailgate the other day and had a "halo" effect appear in the epoxy, shown below just to the right of the latch hole. This has a light skim of Evercoat 416 beneath the epoxy in that area. It was nice and flat while in bare metal, after spraying epoxy, after blocking the Evercoat/ before spraying the last coat of epoxy. I was baffled at what would cause such a nicely formed circle in the paint...
Even scratched the area to see if there was any softness to the Evercoat, but no..
Here's the panel in bare steel before paint and after first coat of epoxy...
No dings, or defects otherwise seen. I had posted a query on the SPI forum to see if anyone had ever run into this. I don't know why I didn't think of this first, but it was suggested to: 1) look inside 2) only time this type of defect had been seen was dropping screwdriver inside door and left similar mark on outside of door bottom after sanding.
So in full investigative mode, I first measured the distance of the defect from the turn latch hole..
The Halo is approx. 3" away from the handle hole..
Measuring that distance on the inside shows.....oh wait....what's that bare metal?
As soon as I saw this I realized there had only been one thing inside that could have caused it... the painting fixture we made..
This was made to hold the tail gate in correct alignment as on the car for painting. I had radiused the lower bar but failed to do so on the top one. A check of the skin with body sweeps shows that a #15 sweep is about correct, so it was used to verify some relief grinding on the top bar...
As added insurance, some truck cap gasket seal was added to further isolate the issue on both top and bottom bar....
On a positive note, glad to find this issue in the primer stage......
But let's back up a second and look at this picture, it should have been my red flag. Where the second mark to the left in the picture was not as round, looking at it now does show a rather symmetrical device was causing this..
So please use my lesson in dumassery to prevent a similar occurrence.

If you're making fixtures to hold body panels insure there are no pointed edges that may cause any outward dings.