No subject
Thu Nov 20 12:05:17 EST 2003
they specialize in.
LL - NY
On Fri, 04 Jan 2002 12:32:37 -0700 Zsolt <zed123 at telusplanet.net> writes:
>I am not a body man myself, but I do have some experience. I have
>repaired some hail damaged cars before, and the best way to go is to
>use
>a 2 stage putty on the sanded paint's surface. You should not grind
>the
>paint off to metal, just sand it. Putty will feather nicely when
>primed
>and painted.
>
>I don't know much about the paintless dent removal, but chances are
>the
>dents may be be too small and too many to make it worth while. You may
>also end up with an uneven surface, where some parts may protrude
>while
>others are still indented.
>
>
> Zsolt
>
>Roa, Greg wrote:
>
>> Hey all,
>> I was wondering if anyone had found a good way or found a tool to
>pop
>> out hail dents on a car. I know of the paintless dent removal
>places,
>> and that sounds like the way to go, but being the hopeless
>> do-it-yourselfer that I am, I want to find a way to do it on my own.
>> Has anyone seen a system like this that is available for the common
>> idiot such as myself?
>> I'm going to get the car prepped for a repaint, and I'd rather not
>bondo
>> little dents like those.
>>
>> Thanks!
>> Greg Roa
>> Cincinnati, OH
>> 86' 4kcsq
>> 93' 90 CS
>> 83' 944
>> And a new fianc=E9 with a Toyota... ; (
>>
>> P.S. The shirts are great. And, having one long sleeve, and one
>short, I
>> can now be a certifiable audifool year round... ; )
>>
>>
>
>
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