The red car (Nevada) needs the old paint (several layers) cleaned off before I start to do the conversion. It is stripped down now, no glass, wireing, interior, ect.
Which to use?
Paint stripper or Media Blasted
I know that paint stripper is messy and you have to neutralize it with water. Also it's hard to get out of the nooks and crannies of the car. But it doesn't distort any panels.
With media blasting, if not done right it can distort the metal. But it cleans the metal compleatly and no mess.
What to look for in a media shop?
Price?
Also I would like to remove the build date sticker and reinstall it after the car is painted. Any suggestions as how to do it?
Ginter will disagree with me... but I advocate stripping over media blasting. You never really get all the grit out.
Take some good masking tape and mask off the seams of your panels. (Do those manually.) Get some quality industrial strength stripper.
Take a sturdy, sharp, utility knife and scratch the surface of the paint HARD. Don't be shy - the body panels are sturdy. (Be sensible, though, don't go gorilla on the rear hood.)
Then, daub your stripper on. Cover with saran wrap to prevent it from drying out. The saran wrap will also force the stripper to work DOWN into the panel, rather than the fumes floating away.
Don't let the stuff dry out (i.e. overnight). Come back in a couple of hours, and scrape it away with a putty knife.
Rinse thoroughly with water, use something like Rust-Mort or another product that will stop flash-rust.
Work one panel at a time. This method removed the majority of 4 paint jobs. No, it wasn't perfect, but it got most of the crap off with a minimum of effort.
-Rusty
I am with lawrence. use that aircraft stripper stuff and the paint bubbles up in 15 min. blasting leaves such an incredible mess. I would not blast unless the car was down to NOTHING and it was on a rotisserie so you can spin the media out. stripping also leaves the metal surface in better shape for painting (less prep sanding).
How timely.
Stripper sucks!
I just got home with my front hood, rear trunk lid and donor quarter panel from the blaster. They don't look any more warped than they were when they went into his shop. And the silicone between the stiffening ribs and the panels are gone. Pics later.
It's important to think about the media used in blasting. I've heard that plastic grit will allow you to take paint jobs down to the original primer. Sand is crazy abrasive which means heat and warpage and leaves a rough finish that you can't paint over. So don't use sand. Plastic is pretty expensive, but if you're looking for a thorough cleaning, I don't think you can beat blasting.
Speaking of the rotissery, anyone have plans they can scan and email me?
I have a rottissery. Half finished one (my welder broke today). It can be taken apart and reassembled at the blasting place if they don't have one.
Those of you that have had stuff blasted, what did the shop use as a medium? And what questions should I ask them to determine if they are any good?
I'm thinking about paint stripper for the hoods.....blast the rest.
Ginter, we talked about this two days ago.
However, my experience with stripper was different.
It's easy to pull selected panels off for media blasting. But if it's an entire chassis, I'd go with stripper rather than dealing with media in the engine compartment, doors, center tunnel, suspension, under the dash, etc, etc, etc.... You never really get ALL of it out.
My opinion only,
Rusty
How about dipping the entire chassis? Anyone have experience with this? Local strip shop quoted $900 but has never done a 914.
I just did my whole car. (outer body panels only) I used a small hand held (speed pro blaster) and the 3m rolo disks on a pencil grinder for hard to reach places. The medium I used was flexo lite glass beads. Very little distortion but time consuming on the parts that had all 9 layers of paint. The thing with blasting is to not use too much pressure too course a medium (black beauty for eg.)and too much medium at the same time. It will heat up the metal as it pushes on it and that causes distortion.
I never tried stripping on a car but it works great on furniture.
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i had my car sandblasted and it worked fine.
only real problem is getting all the sand out afterwards.
a rotisserie should help, but i just used a strong shop-vac.
areas to look out for:
Andy- what did they charge you?
What did they blast it with?
Did they prime it afterwards?
Were going to have twins
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Even after all of Andy's hard work, I swear I still saw a bit of sand in his rear trunk!
Am I right, Andy?
I'm not sure what colour it is. PO didn't know, he got the car that way. It was to be a project for him and his son and I'm not sure who ran out of interest first.
Thanks for everyones input.
My ex bro-in-law (owns a body shop) suggested feathering the edges (where the paint layers show, lifting) and only spot blasting areas that are suspect or really needs it.
My son wanted it to match his car (white), but I think it should stay red. I like how Andys car looks and if the boy wants a V8 car to match his 1.7L, he can build his own.
So the boy and I go out to visit my sister and bro-in-law tonight and the bro-in-law has to show me his new toy (both Dr.'s). A 100 gal tank, huge compressor (can't remember the CFM) with a 10 hp motor and a semi pro media blaster. He also bought 50 bags of sand with beads mixed in. Guess I don't have to worry about the cost of getting the car done now.
plastic tops off of spray paint cans fit the heater tubes at the lower firewall nicely. just seal them w/masking tape. for the blast residue. shove a small shpvac hose up the tube, way up there. with the vac running take the spray nozzle on your comp and back blow the vents and heater openings. operate the vent controls while you're doing it. nothing nicer than getting you car running, opening up the heater lever, and having the crap blow all over your interior, your face, and if the top is off a fine dusting in the garage.
kevin
I had some 911 panels plastic media blasted at Crown Chevrolet in Dublin CA.
They charged $50 per panel.
They did a great job. I elected to used plastic media blasting as this did not remove the O.E. galvanizing on the panels.
It could not remove the polyurethene underseal (what can!), but it did take all the paint off the undersealer and that made it easier to do with a hot air gun once the parts were back from blasting.
In hindsight, I should have heat gunned the polyurethene sealer off first, as there is still original black panel paint under where the PU sealer was.
This is a GM dealership and they can successfully do full color changes on brand new cars using their equipment and experience, they do a load of street rods too.
For removeable panels I would not hesitate to do this again, as the cost was low and the convenience was high.
I have had several cars blasted in the last 20 years, only one bad experience (the first one!), but that bad one made me very cautious and I think that has paid dividends.
Our local powder coater - San Carlos CA, a BMW and Porsche nut is about to start using a plastic media in a full car size booth, once we try it all out I will post about this for the Bay Area members. He will do cars on a spindle, or pallet.
Plastic media is also good for stripping fiberglass and other composite panels, where normal sand blasting and chemical stripping is problematic.
I also use stripper, but like most people, I am lookingn for the easiest option, task specific, when it comes to removing paint...
Hayden PTBT
How timely of a thread.
I have #269 on the rotiserie and stripped 98%.
My plan. This and 2cents won't buy you much....
Front and rear trunks - Aircraft stripper.
Rest of body - Blast.
I'm going to be using a combination of the following 2 medias.
#1 Silica Sand aka glass beads. #1 can be bought for about $4 per bag vs $30 for glass beads
Garnet - slightly more aggressive than silica but will work great for the under car areas that have remaining crud (undercoat, seam sealer) on them. Primarily I'm going to use this for the engine compartment and nearby the bumper mounts. Abrasive rating of 4.5
I found a great way to remove undercoating. Citrus Degreaser. Our chemical rep at work has a product that is a citrus gel. Spray the crap on and let it set for 20-30 minutes and then take it off with a pressure washer.
For the blast cabinet, I'm going to use #1 silica and walnut shells.
SAFETY NOTE: When blasting use at minimum a N95 Dust Mask or preferably a resperator that you would use for painting.
I'd rather save damaging my lungs for the oil smoke off of the heat exchangers
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