Health & Safety question
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Alot of the advice I have read seems to indicate I should sand down my paintwork by hand (lots of hours) and grind out any gelcoat cracks for repairs
Sanding dry also seems to be recommended
My question is....... are their any H&S issues sanding the paint/gelcoat grinding (1972 vintage) or is it just sensible precautions like using a mask (from B&Q)
Sorry for so many questions
Thanks as always
James
Sanding dry also seems to be recommended
My question is....... are their any H&S issues sanding the paint/gelcoat grinding (1972 vintage) or is it just sensible precautions like using a mask (from B&Q)
Sorry for so many questions
Thanks as always
James
- Chris-72-Sprint
- Second Gear
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- Joined: 21 Jan 2007
I'd recommend you get a good dust mask (one with proper filters attached to a mask, not just the paper type) and some goggles. It's not good to inhale fibreglass/paint dust.
If you have lots of layers of paint/primer/filler to remove the sharp chisel (and/or the type of scraper that uses a stanley knife blade) does work well - see the other postings on this...
Good luck!
C
If you have lots of layers of paint/primer/filler to remove the sharp chisel (and/or the type of scraper that uses a stanley knife blade) does work well - see the other postings on this...
Good luck!
C
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Craig Elliott - Third Gear
- Posts: 309
- Joined: 15 Sep 2003
it is my opinion that there is no better finish than that from the factory ---I have always fine wet sanded the body filled the stars with resin sanded and sent out for paint --stripping {unless there is structual damge ] is futile and more damage will be done to the fiber by your actions than if it is left alone or handled by experts --nomex on ---ed
dont close your eyes --you will miss the crash
Editor: On June 12, 2020, Edward Law, AKA TwinCamMan, passed away; his obituary can be read at https://www.friscolanti.com/obituary/edward-law. He will be missed.
Editor: On June 12, 2020, Edward Law, AKA TwinCamMan, passed away; his obituary can be read at https://www.friscolanti.com/obituary/edward-law. He will be missed.
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twincamman - Coveted Fifth Gear
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- Joined: 02 Oct 2003
Scrape the paint, I used various chisels for this, very sharp!! Goggles are essential as the flakes go every where at high velocity, I have ground into the gel coat and repaired surface cracks with resin and fibre glass tissue. major damage like splits have been repaired with resin and glass fibre matt.
If the panels are crack free, then I'd sand back the paint to the factory polyester layer and use that as a base. Wear a decent mask (he says fag in one hand!!).
I've been advised to dry sand the car untill the primer is on it, then wet flat.
Mines almost ready to go for primer/top coat!!
Mark
If the panels are crack free, then I'd sand back the paint to the factory polyester layer and use that as a base. Wear a decent mask (he says fag in one hand!!).
I've been advised to dry sand the car untill the primer is on it, then wet flat.
Mines almost ready to go for primer/top coat!!
Mark
- tower of strength
- Third Gear
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- Joined: 15 Mar 2005
Miles Wilkins has a very good book on repairing fiberglass. Same person who wrote the book on the twin cam engine. Out of print but still available.
- wojeepster
- Second Gear
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- Joined: 08 Jul 2006
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