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December 12th, 2008, 23:55 | #1 |
--stripping paint tutorial--
Hey Everyone!!! so before I sell my beloved gun...I decided to strip the shit paint job that was on it so that the next owner can get a more visual pleasing package....
So here is a tutorial on how to strip paint. TONS of Credit goes to Cheeseman since he helped me throughout the process..its him u see in pics and his hands lol BEFORE GETTING STARTED: make sure u have the following equipment - Rubber Gloves for chemical washing, painting etc.. - cloth for taking paint off - toothbrush - wash basin or any METAL container (the liquid ure gonna use will eat plastic as we have experienced....) #1 Get a Rust removal/paint stripping chemical liquid from local Hardware store and have it ready [IMG][/IMG] #2 Dump half of the liquid (depending on the size of the container) into the container. Best way to judge on amount is that half of the metal body should be submurged in this liquid. #2 Put the metal body in (in dissasembled state) and let it sit for 10 min on one side. Over time u will see the paint start chipping off, if it doesnt, THAT IS FINE. In ten min once u wipe it will easily come off. #3 Flip to the other side once the 10 min is up. #4 Grab the cloth and start wiping the leftover paint off. #5 Once u did everything possible by wiping the paint off with the Cloth, take the toothbrush and brush in the parts the cloth couldnt get into. #6 Wipe down the body and its pieces (if any) with dry cloth. #6 submurge body in luke warm water in a bucket or anything u can fully submurge the body into. Keep the water running so it keeps filtering for about 2 min. #7 Now, turn full cold water on and let in run for 2 min. #8 Take the Body out and Dry it with CLEAN Cloth. #9 Dampen cloth and go over the body, then dry the body with dry cloth. #10 VOILA!!!! U R DONE! Custom Beast back in original form after being Paint Stripped! We hope that This tutorial will help thoes ppl inquiring as to the process of remoing unwanted paint of their metal bodies/gun parts. BTW those scratches were there before, this process DOES NOT scratch the gun or any gun part. HOWEVER If you want to clean straight to the bare metal, USE Superclean and it will clean everythin right off!!! Last edited by BORDENSNIPER; December 13th, 2008 at 12:02.. |
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December 13th, 2008, 00:05 | #2 |
AKaholic
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Or, you could just use SuperClean right to the bare metal if you want.
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December 13th, 2008, 00:09 | #3 |
a.k.a. Palucol
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thx man, I'll try that to remove the red paint on my flashhider...
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December 13th, 2008, 00:56 | #4 |
With the amount of latex we used in this process it could have gone to a better use to save hundreds of thousands of parents with their possible future accidents. BURDENSNIPER, too bad this amount of latex wasn’t available to your parents a couple of decades ago.
Then again, I'm probably a bigger failure to my folks. :/ Last edited by Cheeseman; December 13th, 2008 at 00:59.. |
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December 13th, 2008, 01:03 | #5 |
DO NOT USE HOT WATER TO RINSE CHEMICALS
Hot water will cause the chemicals to evaporate in the steam, and it'll present a HUGE chance of inhaling some of it. |
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December 13th, 2008, 01:07 | #6 |
Easy there with the fonts, this isn't a poster competition. We didn't use boiling hot water to cause steam and evaporation. It was pretty much just warm water so the excess residue would come off easier in comparison to the use of cold water.
Last edited by Cheeseman; December 13th, 2008 at 01:10.. |
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December 13th, 2008, 01:08 | #7 |
He's absolutely right. Especially with the types of things used for stripping paint. They will often have low[er than water] boiling points, so hot water from the tap is gonna bring that vapour out and pose risks.
EDIT: even lukewarm water will raise the amount of vapour coming off. The warmer it is the more vapour is going to come. Best to use cold water and try and wipe it off or something.
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I love freedom and consequently America |
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December 13th, 2008, 01:29 | #8 |
hotwater does magic....
but good point ppl whould note it then. Obviously wear a breathing mask/construction masking when doing this procedure Last edited by BORDENSNIPER; December 13th, 2008 at 02:03.. |
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December 13th, 2008, 02:36 | #9 | |
Quote:
I'm simply trying to help some people avoid a potentially harmful situation. I've got experience stripping paints, and experience with solvents... That stuff is much more harmful than people give it credit for. |
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December 13th, 2008, 15:37 | #10 |
Formerly funkeinstein
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if i understand . my gun was painted whit spray paint buy the previous owner this method is going to remove the paint .. and will reveal the original paint job under ?
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December 13th, 2008, 17:52 | #11 |
YES, but the "original job" is the factory color
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December 13th, 2008, 18:21 | #12 |
Where can I find SuperClean?
But you say do not use plastic cause the product eat it, but the glove are made in what? Can those glove can handle that product?
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December 13th, 2008, 18:50 | #13 |
a.k.a. Palucol
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latex (I think they stop making them with that material), or another type of plastic, they are used in Labs and Surgery....but I'm not sure how resistant to those chemical product they are...
but can't you see the pile of gloves he used for that project? |
December 13th, 2008, 21:19 | #14 |
Another nub question:
Where do you put the liquid when its finish? Did it eat PVC??
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December 13th, 2008, 21:22 | #15 |
a.k.a. Palucol
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bonne question...
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