Re: Pait remover question
Paint strippers are a bad idea on a car. The best thing is good old labor intensive sanding or blasting.
Sanding and blasting works great on steel but not on soft substraits like fiberglass, urethane, rubber, ect. You have a very hard time controling the sanding when doing it the labor intensive way. For an example if you are powersanding with 60 grit you will have no feeling when you run out of paint and his the substrait material. I've sanded many of metal bodies down to bear metal but never done fiberglass. This has to be done the chemical way.
There are now many different blasting medias designed for stripping paint from fiberglass, SMC, etc. If you contact a reputable blaster, they'll recommend the proper media.... they use everything from ice (CO2), and soda, to plastic, walnut shells (really), to glass beads. Really.
Look here for an example (sorry, itsa vette
) :
plastic media blasting of fiberglass
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One thing I learned when I block sanded one of my Viper doors.... there are many layers of paint, filler, featherfill, more paint, more featherfill, etc, etc on a Viper as it leaves the factory. Not sure If I'd recommend blasting. Lots of block sanding may get you surprizingly close to all of your paint removed. It did for the one door I block sanded.
You can see this on the picture of rear fender.....which had factory paint on it...... not much red left on this fender after block sanding!
same fender after paint:
You'll still want to block sand like mad if you choose blasting, Ed used two part urathane primer on mine as noted above.