Soda Blast Body Paint removal M series

Soda Blast Body Paint removal M series

Author
Discussion

Artracing

Original Poster:

43 posts

56 months

Thursday 31st October 2019
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Like to hear if anyone has experience soda blasting 2500M body for paint removal.
What type media.
What grit.
Pressures.

Rob

esso

1,849 posts

218 months

Thursday 31st October 2019
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Make sure you take it to a reputable company, a buddy of mine was supposed to have had his Cerbera body soda blasted, they actually shot-blasted it and blew holes in the body, luckily the engine wasn't in the car but it resulted in the body having to be taken off the chassis and it ruined the interior.

DAKOTAstorm

420 posts

158 months

Thursday 31st October 2019
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I got mine soda blasted, it’s very good at stripping and exposing all previous paint and attempted repairs. Be careful though as it can unearth some surprises and the whole body needs refinishing and tissuing after, which is obviously time consuming and costly.

KKson

3,406 posts

126 months

Thursday 31st October 2019
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One of the Wedge lads had his SEAC project soda blasted by Central TVR prior to a full respray. Finish looks fantastic. I've spoken to them regarding my similar project and they say that soda blast finish is better for keying in the paint, it's less intrusive so interior trim can be kept in place, and it's cheaper than mechanical paint stripping due to the time element. I'm seriously thinking of going the same way.

Byker28i

60,198 posts

218 months

Friday 1st November 2019
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esso said:
Make sure you take it to a reputable company, a buddy of mine was supposed to have had his Cerbera body soda blasted, they actually shot-blasted it and blew holes in the body, luckily the engine wasn't in the car but it resulted in the body having to be taken off the chassis and it ruined the interior.
why would you have a fibreglass body soda blasted?

Artracing

Original Poster:

43 posts

56 months

Saturday 23rd November 2019
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I have a guy now that has been using crushed glass. Claims it doesn't have the problems with soda and contamination.
That's my plan now. Cost is $700-$900 which seems reasonable.

Rob

PS I seem to get shut down posting as a new member. I couldn't even post to ask moderator. Seem like I'm only allowed one a month or something. I haven't posted in weeks because even tho I started the thread.

V8fan

6,308 posts

269 months

Saturday 23rd November 2019
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Perhaps you aren't confirming your membership? You may have had emails from PH and they're in your junk folder.

esso

1,849 posts

218 months

Sunday 24th November 2019
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Byker28i said:
why would you have a fibreglass body soda blasted?
To remove multiple layers of paint.

Unsorted

298 posts

63 months

Sunday 24th November 2019
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Would recommend buying and reading https://www.amazon.co.uk/Restore-Fibreglass-Bodywo...
before deciding a course of action re your GRP body. Helped me.

Slow M

2,737 posts

207 months

Saturday 7th December 2019
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Been a while, since I researched this topic, but I thought plastic media blasting was the best way, for fiberglass. From what I remember, it’s supposed to be less damaging to the glass fibers, than most/all other options. Also, you can use the media several times.

B

wily_coyote

82 posts

81 months

Sunday 8th December 2019
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I used to have a Farrow Blaster - a 'slurry' blast cleaning machine that mixes the blast medium with water, practically eliminating any airborne particles. It also washes the target as you go. Some of the work I did with this was removing old antifoul paint from fibreglass boat hulls, for which I used olivine (powdered pumice) as the blast medium. Adjusted properly, you can remove paint one layer at a time, with zero damage to the gel coat. There's video on YouTube somewhere that shows a guy writing on a raw egg with a felt pen, then using the blaster to remove the ink without damaging the shell!

I also did some work on an Escort Mk1 restoration where the requirement was 'back to bare metal, get rid if any rust'. For this job I used garnet - much more aggressive and very effective. With the right equipment and the right setup, you can blast clean just about anything - including eggs apparently...

Whatever you do if you let anyone near your car with any blasting equipment, make sure that they know what they're doing and have worked with fiberglass before as mistakes could be really expensive to rectify.