Non-Hazadous Powdercoat Remover can be purchased through this affiliate link here: Powder Coat Remover used in the video www.removepowdercoating.com/ Hey everyone! Thanks for watching. Here’s a link to the Stripper. www.removepowdercoating.com/
The aircraft stripper had Methylene Chloride in it. I had chemical pneumonia the beginning of last year from using a paint stripper on cabinets. Never felt like that before. I might have to try this!
@@ManCrafting Thats one video that I watched last year over and over. Still brings chills to me. Especially when I went to the dr and they couldn't diagnose anything. I went and got 3 different opinions, but the 2nd and last guy had it together when I told him what I was doing. I didnt make a video last year for 5 months. There are a couple other videos that also talk about people passing out in a cabin of a boat. This stuff was used to strip bathtubs, People would get overtaken and slump into the tub and die.
I appreciate that information on aircraft stripper my father and I have been using that product since the late 90s it works extremely well but you know that it is hazardous to our health means a lot thanks again we appreciate the knowledge
John Made it haha. I think it’s a familiar issue with creators. I definitely look at people who are able to do it as their profession in a different light.
Thanks for this, Chad. Should prove very helpful to many. Loved the outtakes. I'm extemporaneous as well and never script anything... and it shows. LOL Billy
ManCraftingTM not sure tbh I bought a jug from Autozone about 2 weeks ago it’s made by rust-oleum. Idk what brand originally made it. But it is cool that there’s a safer version I’ll probly be switching to the kind you used in the video
Big Guy Customs Ready-to-Use Powder Stripper that Dissolves All Types of Powder Coatings, including TGIC and Epoxy Powder Coating, Varnishes & Adhesives. That’s from the website. I’m sure it can handle paint but I’ll need to test it.
Air craft stripper doesnt remove good powder coat. Just wasted $20 to try on a set of ford cobra valve covers. It did nothing. I wonder if the 9000 would take it off
Kind of like a prior question with being able to Reuse it. Do you put the solution back in the original bottle or store it in a separate container for reuse
Southern_showstopper great question. Here’s my plan. I just posted a video stripping a powder coated tumbler on Instagram. It was the 5th tumbler I stripped with the batch. Duracoat doesn’t seem to contaminate the stripper. As soon as I did a powder coated tumbler it turned the color of the powder. Essentially dissolving it. I plan to use one batch for powder coated and one for duracoated. Also as the remove 9000 starts to lose its potency you can refresh it by topping it off with fresh material. So I am looking for a container that will hold the used material other than the one I used for the video or the original jug. Something with a wide mouth.
Chad I have used a gallon on this which stripped my 6 stand plates and stems as well as about 6 cups although all of those cups had at least 3 coats of paint on them. On a separate note I saw you bought the Kool Koat 2.0 but in later video's you are using the eastwood gun. Do you still have the Kool Koat 2.0 and if so how does it work for you.
I got powdercoat on my carpet (spinning device I made took off and ground the paint into the carpet) I wonder if this stuff will dissolve powdercoat without melting the carpet
I’d be sure to make sure it’s dry before putting in an oven. If it’s sealed properly it shouldn’t be an issue. Previously with other products I’ve stripped a lot of cups with no issue.
@@ManCrafting Thanks, I didn't realize it would buff out that easy. Enduramark and Ceremark sure won't. I've belt sanded and even took a 0.010" cut on the lathe and still see black marks! I can't believe that marked that deep!.
@@RJMachine62 lol. Your're not kidding. The only thing to do on Ceramark or Enduramark is Powder over and don't laser that area. I removed metal before the mark.
Wow, that seems to work great. Can you tell us where you purchased it please? Also I noticed that it seemed to leave, what I would consider, a haze of the wording that was on the cup. Did that go away once it was rinsed? I have plenty of "oops" cups that I'd love to strip and salvage. Thanks, as always, for great content!
Michele Welch here’s where I got it. www.removepowdercoating.com/ As for the haze from the laser. I washed them and then hit the area in the same direction of the brush marks with this. amzn.to/36RfBZO the thumbnail photo is the same Ramblers I stripped in the video. I did two more after filming.
@@ManCrafting Absolutely. I've been working with Cerakote on tumblers recently and have a few casualties. Blasting is always an option on the exterior, but occasionally some gets inside a tumbler and can't be blasted. I can Cerakote some pieces and send them your way for sure. Thanks brother.
How well this stuff will work on stripping paints and primers of different types? This stuff cost the same as other strippers I have seen and used. They also work in half the time the Remove 9000 does.
It will keep stripping until it's unable. Initially It should strip a cup in 15-20 min. As the material weakens it takes longer to work. I've stripped 4 so far and it was still working with less than 15 min. The last one I did was 2 coats of powder. It dissolves in a weird way. Makes the liquid opaque.
I actually have plans for several more videos. I just got a replacement laptop and will be setting it up to run the WorkBee. I somehow lost the previous laptops I was using. It's not unusual for me to move something and have difficulty finding it, but this time is beyond my normal absentmindedness. I absolutely can not locate it. It's been missing since just after the first video. I finally broke down this week and bought a new one. So soon. I think I have everything for at least one more video done except editing before I start the next Ooznest video.
Does this work on glass? I have some light globes that when I took them off of the light fixture to paint around them, some of the powder coating flaked off (if it was powder coating?). I would like to remove the rest of the white powder coating, paint, whatever it is to make the globes clear and then use vintage type bulbs. If my idea works - this will be a much better look than the white globes. I have a rustic house and prefer not white! (I've already tried paint remover with no success.) Or if you have other ideas, please pass them on.... Thank You!
That tumbler has a coating thats super thin tho. Wont take much effort to remove it. Unless its b17 i haven't found anything that will dissolve thick layers of powdercoat
I have some baby billets made from aluminum that are slightly powdercoated will this damage the rim and is it safe to use it and will I have to dip them into a bucket of this liquid?
I suppose it depends on your plan. Are you just coating them with powder? Are you laser etching, are you doing a vinyl removal to reveal a logo and the aluminum? If your only coating, you may be able to get away with a light sanding before coating with new powder. If you're doing one of the other you can strip it and clean it before recoating. This material won't make it unusable.
I am redoing my powder coated rims. Can that product be brushed on the rims? I have animals and pets, I want something thats kinda safe. All suggestions will help me, thanks in advance.
Curiosity question(s): Why the saran-wrap type cover over the glass jar if there's not really an odor and it's safe? Does it evaporate relatively quickly?
That stuff is $130 a gallon.There are several on amazon for much less. Anyone tried them? Also will this work on something that's powdercoated over sandplasted metal, vs. a slick aluminum?
@@jbw9999 I’ve tried many. It was less when I bought it years ago, but the dollar has lost a lot of value. That said the first time I used it I was able to save 6-8 Yeti Ramblers so I was already ahead. I still have half a gallon untainted and the other half is still stripping tumblers.
Why would you want to strip the cup to begin with? That stripper with shipping is close $100. Why not just go out and for the same money, buy a case or two of stainless tumblers? What am I missing here?
David Miller these specific jugs are $50ea. I ruined 8 of them. I have plenty of others that have had the same fate and have just been sitting around the shop waiting for a solution. This likely put $1000 back in my pocket. I suppose if your only customers are people using $5-$6 cups there’s not a lot of value.
@@ManCrafting Yeti is nothing special. People pay those outrageous prices due to their awesome branding. Buy an Ozark from Walmart for less than $10 and you're likely getting the same tumbler from the same manufacturer. Most of the dbl walled vacuum tumblers are all the same functionally. Only the design and lids are different.
Rookie Q: Could I put a stencil on a powder coated tumbler and strip off my own decal by applying solution with like a "bandaid" method? Curious if this would just eat up the vinyl and strip the entire area.
I tried scripted once I watched myself and felt it was boring. I think natural speaking and lots of cutting the garbage pauses and "uh" or "um" makes a more entertaining and engaging video.
@@iheart3dprinting951 There are those that can script and do it really well. It's just not something I feel I do well. I suppose it's possible with practice. I don't even feel comfortable in front of the camera. But I do it anyway.
@@ManCrafting the scripted thing takes practice. I used to do it for my astronomy-based channel when I was first getting going with it because I didn't want to say something wrong or have the jump-cuts. After a while, it got so I didn't need the script anymore. The thing is, with a script, you do have to write as you'd speak. Then it can come out naturally. But I'd still mess those up sometimes too - 2 or 3 or 4 takes later, I'd have a take I could use. It's all good - thanks for sharing the edits at the end! I know how that feels. (I still do those all the time on the astronomy channel.)
Well George. There is cost and value. I’m still on my first gallon from a year ago. I went through many more cans of Aircraft stripper in no time. It was way more expensive to use.
It’s saved me that much on two ramblers, but yea, it would be awesome to have had a discount. I just don’t think there is enough profit in the product to make that possible. I did try.
chris franco way more than I have. It’s not slowing down at all and I’ve done probably 20. I still have more to go, but I’m busy with other things. I have two containers. 1/2 gallon in one for powdercoat. 1/2 gallon in the other for duracoated. The duracoat comes off clean and the liquid stays mostly clean. Powder seems to dissolve and the liquid gets murky. It probably doesn’t matter, but I don’t like mixing food on my plate either. 🤷🏻♂️
It was easy to justify for me. I’m still using the same material I used in this video and I have more than half a gallon left. I’ve saved way more than the cost of the material.
Non-Hazadous Powdercoat Remover can be purchased through this affiliate link here:
Powder Coat Remover used in the video www.removepowdercoating.com/
Hey everyone! Thanks for watching. Here’s a link to the Stripper. www.removepowdercoating.com/
Glad to see I am not the only one who would rather have several takes than to script it out. But in the end, you did great.
Specific Love Creations glad to see you haven’t taken a break from consuming content. Thanks for stopping by!
The aircraft stripper had Methylene Chloride in it. I had chemical pneumonia the beginning of last year from using a paint stripper on cabinets. Never felt like that before. I might have to try this!
That MEC is some nasty stuff. Definitely meant for outdoor use with a proper respirator rated for VOC’s.
www.cbsnews.com/news/dangerous-paint-stripper-chemical-methylene-chloride-ban-on-hold/
@@ManCrafting Thats one video that I watched last year over and over. Still brings chills to me. Especially when I went to the dr and they couldn't diagnose anything. I went and got 3 different opinions, but the 2nd and last guy had it together when I told him what I was doing. I didnt make a video last year for 5 months. There are a couple other videos that also talk about people passing out in a cabin of a boat. This stuff was used to strip bathtubs, People would get overtaken and slump into the tub and die.
Yea, that Merthylene Death will make your brain dribble out your nose for sure.
MaxairEngineering might explain a few things about me. 🤣
The last 4 minutes are some of the best 🤣 Thank you for an awesome video with a new and safe product!!!
Mistakes abound. 🤣
I appreciate that information on aircraft stripper my father and I have been using that product since the late 90s it works extremely well but you know that it is hazardous to our health means a lot thanks again we appreciate the knowledge
My pleasure. I used it too. Glad I used it outside. I do enough sketchy stuff. I don’t need to add that to the list of issues.
Wow that worked well. I have the exact same problem when I try and talk to the camera. You nailed it in the end
John Made it haha. I think it’s a familiar issue with creators. I definitely look at people who are able to do it as their profession in a different light.
lol them outtakes were funny!! great video
Thanks. I figured the video was so short why not. 🤷🏻♂️
Dude I can so relate to multiple takes. That's why I dont talk in front of the camera. Cool product thanks for sharing.
Dan The Maker Man haha. But your so good at it. Well 1/100. 🤣
I just bought aircraft stripper last week at autozone. Its still available at most autoparts stores.
I think it’s been reformulated.
No it’s not! I’ve been everywhere in my area!
Great find! I have a stack of "prototype" cups around. I will try to get my hands on some to try!
Easy. Link is www.removepowdercoating.com/
Hey everyone, I’m Chad, and tomorrow I’m gonna be doing some scripting! Loved it!
Thomas Utley not a chance. 🤣 well maybe. Even an outline would probably help.
Thanks for the great tip for us beginners
Thanks for watching! I hope you find the info helpful.
Nicely done Chad, thanks for the info and and the strip tease! 😁👍🏻👊🏻
Fred McIntyre 🤣🤣🤣👍🏼👊🏼😂😂😂 thanks Fred. I’m just a tease.
That stripper worked hard for you Chad! Exciting to watch.
Thanks Steve. Will you be at WBC? Seems like too long since we’ve hung out.
Thanks for this, Chad. Should prove very helpful to many. Loved the outtakes. I'm extemporaneous as well and never script anything... and it shows. LOL
Billy
Billy Burt it’s a sickness. We can’t help ourselves. 🤣. Thanks for taking a few minutes to watch and comment Billy, I really appreciate it.
Link to buy the product isn't working.
www.removepowdercoating.com/
Did you work it out?
@@ManCrafting Yes, thank you!
That really does an amazing job.
I’m really happy that I now have an option. Very happy.
Great working stuff, thx for the upload.
Thanks for taking a minute to comment.
what's your thought on using this on a powder coated metal door by spraying it on?
I’d probably brush it on. Cover it to keep it wet.
Wow!! That stuff worked great!! Good info Bro. Funny end too!😂😂
The Muz Shop thanks Mike. I appreciate you watching.
Is my Autozone the only Autozone that still sells aircraft remover??
I’m curious if they reformulated the product. It’s been pulled in the original formula.
ManCraftingTM not sure tbh I bought a jug from Autozone about 2 weeks ago it’s made by rust-oleum. Idk what brand originally made it. But it is cool that there’s a safer version I’ll probly be switching to the kind you used in the video
Can you reuse this stripper by putting back in the gallon jug or a different container?
I’ve been using the same gallon since posting this video.
Will it remove paint and epoxy?
Big Guy Customs Ready-to-Use Powder Stripper that Dissolves All Types of Powder Coatings, including TGIC and Epoxy Powder Coating, Varnishes & Adhesives. That’s from the website. I’m sure it can handle paint but I’ll need to test it.
Can an area be masked so it will not completely stripped?
I think you’ll get soft edges and it will look bad.
Do you prefer this over the acetone?
For powdercoating definitely. Duracoat it works faster than acetone.
@@ManCrafting I see the distinction now. Thanks ManCraftingTM!
Any idea if it can be brushed on?
They make a gel version that can be brushed in.
Air craft stripper doesnt remove good powder coat. Just wasted $20 to try on a set of ford cobra valve covers. It did nothing. I wonder if the 9000 would take it off
It’s made for real Powdercoating. Used mostly in industry. They just happen to sell small enough sizes it’s practical for a hobbyist to buy.
How would this work on double coated powder coated car wheels?
Should work the same. Just would take longer.
Can you use this with a vinyl stencil? To personalize mugs
I don’t think that would work. It wouldn’t give sharp lines. It would soften the vinyl as well.
Chad, are you going to try the room temperature gel that is also available?
I’m sure I will. I think there are a few projects that I need to strip that are too big for immersion so it will be my only option.
Is this better than using acetone?
May faster and doesn’t evaporate. I still have the same jar of remover.
Kind of like a prior question with being able to
Reuse it. Do you put the solution back in the original bottle or store it in a separate container for reuse
Southern_showstopper great question. Here’s my plan. I just posted a video stripping a powder coated tumbler on Instagram. It was the 5th tumbler I stripped with the batch. Duracoat doesn’t seem to contaminate the stripper. As soon as I did a powder coated tumbler it turned the color of the powder. Essentially dissolving it. I plan to use one batch for powder coated and one for duracoated. Also as the remove 9000 starts to lose its potency you can refresh it by topping it off with fresh material. So I am looking for a container that will hold the used material other than the one I used for the video or the original jug. Something with a wide mouth.
Chad I have used a gallon on this which stripped my 6 stand plates and stems as well as about 6 cups although all of those cups had at least 3 coats of paint on them. On a separate note I saw you bought the Kool Koat 2.0 but in later video's you are using the eastwood gun. Do you still have the Kool Koat 2.0 and if so how does it work for you.
I do. I use it for second or third coats. I just have so much powder in the Eastwood containers it’s just easier to use them that way.
How many cups can you do? Is that liquid only good for 1 cup?
I’ve used the same gallon since this video. Actually half gallon.
YES! at the head on a stick. subscribed.
🤣 thanks. I used a fixed focus so it allows me to focus when I’m behind the camera.
I got powdercoat on my carpet (spinning device I made took off and ground the paint into the carpet) I wonder if this stuff will dissolve powdercoat without melting the carpet
I would definitely not use it for that.
Have some pc’d bullets in acetone, doesn’t look like it’s going to do the trick. Thanks for the video
.....Acetone works great too!
I actually did a video on that years ago. It works.
Any concerns about the seal at the bottom being affected?
I’d be sure to make sure it’s dry before putting in an oven. If it’s sealed properly it shouldn’t be an issue. Previously with other products I’ve stripped a lot of cups with no issue.
Can you reuse the product after stripping the cups?
I’m still using the same gallon.
How do you remove the laser marks in the stainless or do you try to avoid the same area when marking the next time?
RJMachine I can usually go over the area with a grey scotchbrite pad and buff the image out.
@@ManCrafting Thanks, I didn't realize it would buff out that easy. Enduramark and Ceremark sure won't. I've belt sanded and even took a 0.010" cut on the lathe and still see black marks! I can't believe that marked that deep!.
@@RJMachine62 lol. Your're not kidding. The only thing to do on Ceramark or Enduramark is Powder over and don't laser that area. I removed metal before the mark.
Naval jelly?
Wow, that seems to work great. Can you tell us where you purchased it please? Also I noticed that it seemed to leave, what I would consider, a haze of the wording that was on the cup. Did that go away once it was rinsed? I have plenty of "oops" cups that I'd love to strip and salvage. Thanks, as always, for great content!
Michele Welch here’s where I got it. www.removepowdercoating.com/
As for the haze from the laser. I washed them and then hit the area in the same direction of the brush marks with this. amzn.to/36RfBZO the thumbnail photo is the same Ramblers I stripped in the video. I did two more after filming.
Will this work on uncured Cerakote?
Rickey Bobby great question. My gut is yes, but haven’t tried. If you want to sent me a test piece I’d be happy to test it before you invest in it.
@@ManCrafting Absolutely. I've been working with Cerakote on tumblers recently and have a few casualties. Blasting is always an option on the exterior, but occasionally some gets inside a tumbler and can't be blasted. I can Cerakote some pieces and send them your way for sure. Thanks brother.
Send me an email. I’ll get you a shipping address.
How well this stuff will work on stripping paints and primers of different types? This stuff cost the same as other strippers I have seen and used. They also work in half the time the Remove 9000 does.
I think the primary thing with this is it’s not as hazardous to use. It works great. I’ve used it in paint/primer/powdercoat/duracoat.
Chad - is it reusable or a one time only “soak and strip” then you need fresh liquid?
It will keep stripping until it's unable. Initially It should strip a cup in 15-20 min. As the material weakens it takes longer to work. I've stripped 4 so far and it was still working with less than 15 min. The last one I did was 2 coats of powder. It dissolves in a weird way. Makes the liquid opaque.
Have you tried the gel version yet? If so, did you find it any better than the 9000?
I still have a lot of the liquid and haven’t had a specific need for the gel. I’m pretty sure they have almost identical formulations though.
@@ManCrafting Thanks for the reply! I appreciate it!!
Tony Abdalla I always try to reply to questions.
Are you going to have a follow up video on the Ooznest Workbee ? Thanks
I actually have plans for several more videos. I just got a replacement laptop and will be setting it up to run the WorkBee. I somehow lost the previous laptops I was using. It's not unusual for me to move something and have difficulty finding it, but this time is beyond my normal absentmindedness. I absolutely can not locate it. It's been missing since just after the first video. I finally broke down this week and bought a new one. So soon. I think I have everything for at least one more video done except editing before I start the next Ooznest video.
haha love the outtakes Chad
Artfully Rogue thanks Doug. See you in February?
Hmmm.... will you look at that!!
Haha, have you seen that video?
Yeah! Funny guy... maybe you should say something like that on one of your videos! Lol
I’m sure I could work it in. I wonder how many people would catch it. 🤣
Does this work on glass? I have some light globes that when I took them off of the light fixture to paint around them, some of the powder coating flaked off (if it was powder coating?). I would like to remove the rest of the white powder coating, paint, whatever it is to make the globes clear and then use vintage type bulbs. If my idea works - this will be a much better look than the white globes. I have a rustic house and prefer not white! (I've already tried paint remover with no success.) Or if you have other ideas, please pass them on.... Thank You!
It would definitely work.
@@ManCrafting It worked! One down & 6 more to go! If I could post a pic of before and after, I would. Thanks for your help!
Hey Chad, any problems with bubbling from the bottom cap when you go to recoat these?
I haven’t had that issue. I’m guessing if it soaks too long maybe it penetrates.
Will this work on cerakote parts?
I’ve not tried it, but I don’t think so.
Could this be used on soda cans?
I don’t see why not. Should be pretty quick.
Loved the out takes. Didn’t see any clothes come off. 😂😂
This is a family friendly channel with the occasional dad joke. 🤣. Besides. I want to grow the channel. Not burn it to the ground.
I use Dichloromethane (methylene chloride) ... Comes off in minutes!
Where do you get this?
Ok but how well does it take off actual powdercoating? Like on a valve cover or bike frame?
TheShangralaaaa17 powdercoating is powdercoating. If you immerse any item with powdercoating it will dissolve the powdercoating.
That tumbler has a coating thats super thin tho. Wont take much effort to remove it. Unless its b17 i haven't found anything that will dissolve thick layers of powdercoat
I have some baby billets made from aluminum that are slightly powdercoated will this damage the rim and is it safe to use it and will I have to dip them into a bucket of this liquid?
I suppose it depends on your plan. Are you just coating them with powder? Are you laser etching, are you doing a vinyl removal to reveal a logo and the aluminum? If your only coating, you may be able to get away with a light sanding before coating with new powder. If you're doing one of the other you can strip it and clean it before recoating. This material won't make it unusable.
I am redoing my powder coated rims. Can that product be brushed on the rims? I have animals and pets, I want something thats kinda safe. All suggestions will help me, thanks in advance.
There is a gel version.
Where do you get it????
Curiosity question(s): Why the saran-wrap type cover over the glass jar if there's not really an odor and it's safe? Does it evaporate relatively quickly?
Great question. It's best to keep the material covered since it reacts with oxygen and will lose it's strength.
@@ManCrafting ah, that makes sense! Thank you.
I looked at stuff up it’s like $130 a gallon. Do you know where I can get it cheaper
It’s the only product I could find. I’ve had the same gallon since posting this video. Still using the material in the glass jar I used in the video.
how much did you pay 130 thanks
@@johnweaver6553 I remember thinking it was expensive, but I don’t recall the exact price. I bought it at least 3 years ago. Probably 4 years.
I think I found it on Amazon for 60 bucks. I’m trying to send you a picture of it, but I can’t for some reason.
That stuff is $130 a gallon.There are several on amazon for much less. Anyone tried them?
Also will this work on something that's powdercoated over sandplasted metal, vs. a slick aluminum?
@@jbw9999 I’ve tried many. It was less when I bought it years ago, but the dollar has lost a lot of value. That said the first time I used it I was able to save 6-8 Yeti Ramblers so I was already ahead. I still have half a gallon untainted and the other half is still stripping tumblers.
Why would you want to strip the cup to begin with? That stripper with shipping is close $100. Why not just go out and for the same money, buy a case or two of stainless tumblers? What am I missing here?
David Miller these specific jugs are $50ea. I ruined 8 of them. I have plenty of others that have had the same fate and have just been sitting around the shop waiting for a solution. This likely put $1000 back in my pocket. I suppose if your only customers are people using $5-$6 cups there’s not a lot of value.
@@ManCrafting Yeti is nothing special. People pay those outrageous prices due to their awesome branding. Buy an Ozark from Walmart for less than $10 and you're likely getting the same tumbler from the same manufacturer. Most of the dbl walled vacuum tumblers are all the same functionally. Only the design and lids are different.
David Miller it has nothing to do with what I think. If a customer gives me a YETI, I engrave the YETI.
David Miller not to mention I’ve done half a dozen comparison videos showing the function the same.
Rookie Q: Could I put a stencil on a powder coated tumbler and strip off my own decal by applying solution with like a "bandaid" method? Curious if this would just eat up the vinyl and strip the entire area.
Not sure if it would eat the vinyl, my concern would be the product bleeding under the vinyl and not giving the crisp lines I’d want.
So you don't script either LOL. I think non-scripted people can notice the same speaking trait in others. LOL Great laughs.
I tried scripted once I watched myself and felt it was boring. I think natural speaking and lots of cutting the garbage pauses and "uh" or "um" makes a more entertaining and engaging video.
@@iheart3dprinting951 There are those that can script and do it really well. It's just not something I feel I do well. I suppose it's possible with practice. I don't even feel comfortable in front of the camera. But I do it anyway.
@@ManCrafting the scripted thing takes practice. I used to do it for my astronomy-based channel when I was first getting going with it because I didn't want to say something wrong or have the jump-cuts. After a while, it got so I didn't need the script anymore. The thing is, with a script, you do have to write as you'd speak. Then it can come out naturally. But I'd still mess those up sometimes too - 2 or 3 or 4 takes later, I'd have a take I could use. It's all good - thanks for sharing the edits at the end! I know how that feels. (I still do those all the time on the astronomy channel.)
It hasn’t been pulled it was reformulated.
Where is it? www.kleanstrip.com/
Well George. There is cost and value. I’m still on my first gallon from a year ago. I went through many more cans of Aircraft stripper in no time. It was way more expensive to use.
grosklags?
Asking?
LOL
No Promo codes for their stripper LOL! Man $90 shipped is a doozy
It’s saved me that much on two ramblers, but yea, it would be awesome to have had a discount. I just don’t think there is enough profit in the product to make that possible. I did try.
ManCraftingTM how many tumblers were you able to strip with the gallon? Looks like most liquid could be reclaimed easily
chris franco way more than I have. It’s not slowing down at all and I’ve done probably 20. I still have more to go, but I’m busy with other things. I have two containers. 1/2 gallon in one for powdercoat. 1/2 gallon in the other for duracoated. The duracoat comes off clean and the liquid stays mostly clean. Powder seems to dissolve and the liquid gets murky. It probably doesn’t matter, but I don’t like mixing food on my plate either. 🤷🏻♂️
Scripting is over rated any way......lol.
Jim Dockrell way over rated for me.
$110 a gallon! Yikes. :O
Paid for itself with the ramblers I stripped in this video. I stil am using that gallon.
@@ManCrafting Good to know! :]
I didn't know how reusable/effective the solution was after multiple uses.
A since to be a great product!!! But $90 a gallon a since to be little too far from reality.
It was easy to justify for me. I’m still using the same material I used in this video and I have more than half a gallon left. I’ve saved way more than the cost of the material.
$130 a gallon retail. Nah.
I hear you but it’s paid for itself many times over. I’ve been using the same gallon since I bought it.
I've got glass that has a heatproof powder coat on it. What will work? Thanks mate.
If it’s actually powdercoating and not a porcelain coating it will work.