Definitely it really nice! Been using coal slag for heavy steel and it’s cheap and fast. Starting to look around the yard and seeing more and more things to sandblast now that we have the tools
Excellent work...! I have a 2012 crew cab with surface rust and scaly corrosion on the rockers, the road side of the floorpan and other parts of the bottom, but it's not soft (hit the rockers and underside with a ballpeen hammer in a number of places and nothing flakes off) would you risk sandblasting or laser cleaning...? I only ask because I don't use the truck for work anymore and it will probably get less than 5,000 miles annually from here on out, but I want to keep it for personal use for the long run.
@@FiveBoroNative you could do that it doesn’t sound too bad as long as nothing falls off when you hit it you should be good, just hit it lightly to see then keep going if it’s good, wire wheel on a die grinder works good but slow and can’t get everywhere
I used epoxy primer, (the auto paint store recommended), on Matthew's 1974 F-100. Complete garbage. I'll never use epoxy primer again. Rust through after (sandblasted metal), 1 year. I'll buy off the shelf Walmart primer before epoxy again. Doc
lookin good Hobo!
Nice to be able to sand blast things!
A labor of love, done right, should last for a very long time 👍😁
Definitely it really nice! Been using coal slag for heavy steel and it’s cheap and fast. Starting to look around the yard and seeing more and more things to sandblast now that we have the tools
Looking great 😁
It is looking good
Excellent work...! I have a 2012 crew cab with surface rust and scaly corrosion on the rockers, the road side of the floorpan and other parts of the bottom, but it's not soft (hit the rockers and underside with a ballpeen hammer in a number of places and nothing flakes off) would you risk sandblasting or laser cleaning...?
I only ask because I don't use the truck for work anymore and it will probably get less than 5,000 miles annually from here on out, but I want to keep it for personal use for the long run.
@@FiveBoroNative you could do that it doesn’t sound too bad as long as nothing falls off when you hit it you should be good, just hit it lightly to see then keep going if it’s good, wire wheel on a die grinder works good but slow and can’t get everywhere
I used epoxy primer, (the auto paint store recommended), on Matthew's 1974 F-100. Complete garbage. I'll never use epoxy primer again. Rust through after (sandblasted metal), 1 year. I'll buy off the shelf Walmart primer before epoxy again.
Doc
I used nason brand epoxy primer, read and heard good things on it. Nason is the old chemical formula for DuPont