codfather79

Well-Known Member
Afternoon everyone.
Hope you are all well and enjoying your oil leaking money pits just as much as I am.

Im just about at the point of a rope around ones neck regarding paint removal on Noel, my 1975 S3.

Unfortunately, at some point it looks like he was enlisted into the forces and has received a coat of paint, applied very very badly.
This first coat just about comes off with Nitromorse (green tin)
However, the original paint wont budge. Not even with cellulose thinners.

Any ideas on how to get back to bare aluminium?
I dont have access to a shot blaster, and anyway, im betting the paint is harder than the ally!
Sanding down is not an option. Its impossible to sand a rivet without it looking ****e!
Also, it would cripple my carpel tunnel ridden hands/wrists :(

There must be a paint remover out there that removes car paint?

Why not just sand the bad areas and then re paint, I hear you ask?
Because I dont work that way.
If a jobs worth doing, do it properly.
I have a serious hatred of paint on top of paint on top of paint and so on.

Thank you.
A frustrated Shirl.
 
Afternoon everyone.
Hope you are all well and enjoying your oil leaking money pits just as much as I am.

Im just about at the point of a rope around ones neck regarding paint removal on Noel, my 1975 S3.

Unfortunately, at some point it looks like he was enlisted into the forces and has received a coat of paint, applied very very badly.
This first coat just about comes off with Nitromorse (green tin)
However, the original paint wont budge. Not even with cellulose thinners.

Any ideas on how to get back to bare aluminium?
I dont have access to a shot blaster, and anyway, im betting the paint is harder than the ally!
Sanding down is not an option. Its impossible to sand a rivet without it looking ****e!
Also, it would cripple my carpel tunnel ridden hands/wrists :(

There must be a paint remover out there that removes car paint?

Why not just sand the bad areas and then re paint, I hear you ask?
Because I dont work that way.
If a jobs worth doing, do it properly.
I have a serious hatred of paint on top of paint on top of paint and so on.

Thank you.
A frustrated Shirl.


Wire wheel on a grinder very gently?
 
Just an update.
Strip away pro is the k 9s spheroids
Back to ally in no time.
Word of caution, wear overalls and elbow length gauntlets, it burns like feck!!

Out of curiosity, did they ask for any documentation to show you were a professional?

I've found that I can buy real creosote merely by telling the seller I'm a professional, so it's relatively easy. Not that I creosote my Land Rover, but it's useful stuff for other things.
 
Out of curiosity, did they ask for any documentation to show you were a professional?

I've found that I can buy real creosote merely by telling the seller I'm a professional, so it's relatively easy. Not that I creosote my Land Rover, but it's useful stuff for other things.

No, it was purchased on a trade account.
 
Afternoon everyone.
Hope you are all well and enjoying your oil leaking money pits just as much as I am.

Im just about at the point of a rope around ones neck regarding paint removal on Noel, my 1975 S3.

Unfortunately, at some point it looks like he was enlisted into the forces and has received a coat of paint, applied very very badly.
This first coat just about comes off with Nitromorse (green tin)
However, the original paint wont budge. Not even with cellulose thinners.

Any ideas on how to get back to bare aluminium?
I dont have access to a shot blaster, and anyway, im betting the paint is harder than the ally!
Sanding down is not an option. Its impossible to sand a rivet without it looking ****e!
Also, it would cripple my carpel tunnel ridden hands/wrists :(

There must be a paint remover out there that removes car paint?

Why not just sand the bad areas and then re paint check HANTEN CNC, I hear you ask?
Because I dont work that way.
If a jobs worth doing, do it properly.
I have a serious hatred of paint on top of paint on top of paint and so on.

Thank you.
A frustrated Shirl.
Hi ive started painting in oil, but even using a fast dry medium with it, its stickyish and it is not moving across the paper ok, I havent done oil before so I am new to it, ive prepared the paper and primed it,. Its annoying me as I cannot do it without globby paint strokes. Am I putting too much medium in the paint or should i put less, it is sticky in texture, I cannot fluently paint with the paints, and it ends up liney, and thick when I do a stroke when I come to the edge, so a clump of paint builds up.!
 

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