Thats interesting, I never knew that.That's the cleanest and fastest way to remove bondo.
I don't understand why anyone would want to try anything else.
Thats interesting, I never knew that.That's the cleanest and fastest way to remove bondo.
I don't understand why anyone would want to try anything else.
It will take forever and might scratch the metalIs a 8in mud hog sander good to use?
Yeah I learned this when I was doing a frame off on my 74 k5, 26 years ago, we stripped the body down to bare metal and got it to as perfect as can be with stretch and shrink.Thats interesting, I never knew that.
Why would it take forever?It will take forever and might scratch the metal
If you want remove all of it to get to bare metal it takes too long to sand, the car bondo is a lot harder than mud, so it will be time consuming.Why would it take forever?
What is the difference between mud and bondo?If you want remove all of it to get to bare metal it takes too long to sand, the car bondo is a lot harder than mud, so it will be time consuming.
If you just want remove excess then it will be ok
I was assuming you were talking mud as in gypsum mudWhat is the difference between mud and bondo?
As a former Body Tech, I concur with this comment. Make sure you have a extinguisher source since it will burn. Stiff putty knife to knock in down! Quick & minor cleanup with minimal residue.Small propane torch and a scraper. Just a little heat is all it takes. Faster, no dust.
Why not use a bondo hog?As a former Body Tech, I concur with this comment. Make sure you have a extinguisher source since it will burn. Stiff putty knife to knock in down! Quick & minor cleanup with minimal residue.
Ok I guess I will explain more why the heat is better, if you don't know what is underneath the bondo, you could be hitting high points with the hog, with a scraper and heat you can carve anything from nooks and crannies.Why not use a bondo hog?
Why would a bondo hog take forever to remove paint and bondo?Ok I guess I will explain more why the heat is better, if you don't know what is underneath the bondo, you could be hitting high points with the hog, with a scraper and heat you can carve anything from nooks and crannies.
I had once a van that had been sideswiped and they used a slide hammer to pull the dent out a little and it made little craters at each hole so you had a valley full of little pointy craters, the hog would hacaught on all of them and possibly ripped the sheet metal.
Is it best to remove to bare metal or just the excess. The paint is cracking from the very old paint.If you want remove all of it to get to bare metal it takes too long to sand, the car bondo is a lot harder than mud, so it will be time consuming.
If you just want remove excess then it will be ok
Is your goal to remove cracks for now or to get to metal to fix the body work better to reduce the thickness of bondo used.Is it best to remove to bare metal or just the excess. The paint is cracking from the very old paint.
I'm surprised no one suggested a hammer...
Fix it right. Would a heat gun work to remove bondo?Is your goal to remove cracks for now or to get to metal to fix the body work better to reduce the thickness of bondo used.
Anything more than 1/32" thick will eventually crack.
If you want to keep the truck remove all the way to metal and fix it right.
If you just want to make it look better just grind where the cracks are, get some bondo with fiber reinforcement and patch it and paint.
No.Fix it right. Would a heat gun work to remove bondo?