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The Body Shop TECH General questions that don't fit in any other forum |
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#1
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Rusty interior trim cleanup and single stage?
My recent 66 Catalina purchase has seen some moisture on the inside and has some surface rust on the interior metal trim pieces...some worse than others. I am fairly green in the auto restoration world, but I am capable of learning it. I originally wanted to have someone soda blast the trim, just because I figured all of the little sharp bends of it could be hard to hand sand out? I attached a picture for reference...I would say this is a "bad" piece. Some pieces just have a few dots of rust.
I also have my own blaster and wasn't sure if anyone has used certain medias that have worked? Or maybe good ol' fashioned hand sanding is just what I should do. I'm not opposed. Lastly, could I get by with just some single stage color match paint (reef turquoise) since it's interior and won't be exposed to the elements. This won't be a full restoration because the outside is a patina car. Just looking to freshen the inside up since I'm putting new carpet and seats in it. New guy to the forum and appreciate any feedback. I've been using the search option and reading all I can. Thanks a lot! |
The Following User Says Thank You to kpbrown31 For This Useful Post: | ||
#2
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I've seen this photo before. Dunno. Looks promising.
https://www.jalopyjournal.com/forum/...hnique.876119/ |
#3
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#4
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Welcome! I guess if this were mine, and considering your intensions, owning my own blasting cabinet, I'd use glass bead media as opposed to hand sanding because sanding won't get into the deeper pits of the corrosion like blasting would accomplish. Then it looks like this particular piece at least may require a few coats of primer to fill in the micro pits left behind from the blasting, then hand sand the primer to a smooth finish. Then, at least for me, single stage paint would be fine and last a long, long time if not subjected directly to outside weather conditions.
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#5
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#6
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I've used CLR in the past to soak bolts, nuts, small parts etc. and it did a great job of removing rust, given plenty of soaking time. However, I bought some not too long ago and it seems to me like it's not the same strength as it used to be.
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#7
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I agree with 433 lemans. I sand blasted my dash on 63 Bonne. and primed & painted.
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DBANDGB |
#8
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Did you just grind the welds to get your dash out? I need to do the same on mine, but I wasn’t under the impression any of the old metal dash’s in GM cars/trucks were removable.
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#9
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I used these folks for interior paint:
https://www.automotivetouchup.com/to...66/all-models/ They will mix you up single stage upon request, that's what I used. They will sell you paint in cans or spray cans. I painted all my hard interior parts with spray cans from these folks. The match is very good. James Q
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James Quayhagen 1963 Bonneville Safari - Nocturne Blue, 4-speed |
#10
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" Darksiders Rule "
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#11
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I actually ended up going down today to a local auto body supply shop and they mixed me up a quart of Nason brand single stage. I've seen some guys on here state that they like it as a product. The guy said I wouldn't really need to add any hardener to it since I'm just using it on the interior stuff? I'm not much of a painter, but would you recommend still adding hardener to it?
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#12
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Plus if you get a boogah in it...you can sand and buff it. |
#13
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I wouldn't add the hardener myself. I don't see the need either.
One other thing to consider, and I could be wrong but once you add the hardener, whatever you have left over in that mix will setup and be unusable again, so what's left of the mix will be waste (unless formulas have changed since I was in that line of work which was admittedly quite a while ago). Last edited by 433lemans; 02-06-2023 at 11:44 PM. |
#14
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Thanks for the reply. I'll give it a try without hardener and see what happens. I'm sure it will be fine for my project.
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#15
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I would say once primed, rather than sand, use scotch bright pad to break your surface. It'll get not only the high spots only sandpaper would get, but it'll reach down below the raised surfaces just sand paper can't reach. I'm looking at your surfaces as being that bumpy, wrinkle finish and not smooth.
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