sand blast and treat frame....
Originally Posted by Mcmopar
Do you media blast cars? Do you know anyone in NC who does?
For instance Silica Sand
is about $.07 a pound. Melamine(plastic shot) is about $1.30 a pound.Most of the higher dollar medias are meant to be shot many many times (up to 200 cycles). Although we have a completly INDOOR facility, we do not have floor re-claimers or media cleaners/seperators (meaning, one shot and your done).
I am not aware of anyone in N.C that blasts, might want to check your local yellow pages or thomasdirectory.net.
Sometimes we find that upscale body shops have blast rooms, they are not cheap to set up and run.
IMHO POR-15 polyurethane is MUCH more durable than red oxide primers. The industrial Rust Oleum with fish oil is pretty good, and will work with slightly less surface prep, but it is not nearly as tough or salt resistant in my experience. I think that the urethane sticks better than the epoxy, too. The epoxy seems to rely more on film strength, so will let corrosion migrate under the paint more.
Of course, the real problem is that the paint formulas keep changing -- I suppose that is the EPA at work.
BTW, I would gladly pay $70 bucks to have my frame sand-blasted -- does that include the initial steam-clean, etc?
Of course, the real problem is that the paint formulas keep changing -- I suppose that is the EPA at work.
BTW, I would gladly pay $70 bucks to have my frame sand-blasted -- does that include the initial steam-clean, etc?
Micaiahfied:
I have no experience with sandblasting. But I can tell you that I have used Rust Destroyer paint on a number of projects and can verify that the stuff works great. You remove the loose rust etc and the paint will really stick and convert the rust. Also it accepts paint well. The last project I used it on was a farm disc.......it has yet to rust since painting it. The paint is really heavy weight wise per quart. Hope this helps.
http://www.rust007.com/destroyerhome.htm
Dusty
I have no experience with sandblasting. But I can tell you that I have used Rust Destroyer paint on a number of projects and can verify that the stuff works great. You remove the loose rust etc and the paint will really stick and convert the rust. Also it accepts paint well. The last project I used it on was a farm disc.......it has yet to rust since painting it. The paint is really heavy weight wise per quart. Hope this helps.
http://www.rust007.com/destroyerhome.htm
Dusty
BTW, I would gladly pay $70 bucks to have my frame sand-blasted -- does that include the initial steam-clean, etc?
Thread
Thread Starter
Forum
Replies
Last Post
krisbarger
3rd Gen Engine and Drivetrain -> 2003-2007
6
Nov 11, 2006 05:46 PM





