Translation please!!!Buck when I did my goar it took way to loog and the cost kep going up. You can see osic here if look. This spring I will be duing this spring on one of my M35s .
John
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Translation please!!!Buck when I did my goar it took way to loog and the cost kep going up. You can see osic here if look. This spring I will be duing this spring on one of my M35s .
John
Coating with aluminium foil might work better. (Check first, it may react with the stripper!) Foil will seal the surface completely and won't absorb any of the stripper. Heating the surface before applying the stripper may make it work better too.PRC DeSoto makes a chemical stripper called PR-3500 which contains phenol which will blister the skin in short order, plus it has a very distinctive smell.
When I have large surfaces requiring cured polyurethanes to be removed, I coat the surface with two coats of PR-3500 and then cover the wetted surface with newspaper to keep the evaporation to a minimum. After about an hour, I strip back the paper to reveal a heavily wrinkled painted surface.
Here's a different one, my DTC 8606 forklift has CARC paint on it just looks like normal camo. There is a stencil on the right front fender that states:
The white primer is a waterborne lead and chromate free primer. The specification is Mil-Prf-53022. BTW, it's junk.WDCARC
01/05
I was told that meant it was painted with the water based CARC in January of 05. Last winter it started popping paint in quarter sized spots all over the forktruck down to bare metal. The strange thing is the backside of the chips were white. I figured the paint would come off easily with the needle scaler, but it doesn't. Go figure, I have an Ingersol Rand long stroke scaler that is designed for welding slag. Got me beat I'm just going to spot prime it until I figure out what's going on.
I meant to ask you this at some point in the past and now is as good a time as any. I have access to a very high quality epoxy primer (we have used on multiple classic car restorations with very high end paint jobs and have been very pleased with it) at a reduced price (my friend is a distributor). This is it:The white primer is a waterborne lead and chromate free primer. The specification is Mil-Prf-53022. BTW, it's junk.
My company extensively tested the lead and chromate free primer with the first version of the Mil-Dtl-64159 water dispersible CARC and found that if you did not apply the CARC to at least 4 mils thick that if failed adhesion testing.
I imagine that the localized areas of paint popping if closely inspected will show that the CARC was either damaged in that area or that the CARC coating was thin in those areas.
Yep, if you're working on flat areas. Corners and edges will eat up those pads much quicker (like bumper and grill work that I'm doing now).36 grit sanding discs on a 4" grinder will last about the area of a door.
Clinto,I meant to ask you this at some point in the past and now is as good a time as any. I have access to a very high quality epoxy primer (we have used on multiple classic car restorations with very high end paint jobs and have been very pleased with it) at a reduced price (my friend is a distributor). This is it:
http://www.southernpolyurethanes.com/Product lines.htm
Tech sheet: http://www.southernpolyurethanes.com/tech sheets new/2010revised/Expoxy_primer.pdf
MSDS: http://www.southernpolyurethanes.com/MSDS Sheets/msds09/6600_6610_6620_6700_MSDS_Final.pdf
I'd much rather use this stuff, as we've had such good luck with it (we've had 2 trailers that were stripped and primed with this stuff 3 years ago, then the business fell apart and they were never finished and they've been in the elements ever since without a bit of fade, corrosion, etc.). But I don't want to spend the money to buy 5 gallons of CARC and shoot my truck with it only to find they are incompatible.
Opinions?
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