STRUTS & RUDDERS

The Main Sand Box for bertram31.com

Moderators: CaptPatrick, mike ohlstein, Bruce

Post Reply
Craig Mac
Senior Member
Posts: 711
Joined: Feb 15th, '07, 18:09

STRUTS & RUDDERS

Post by Craig Mac »

I want to clean up my struts and rudders--too many layers of old paint----what is the preferred tools and method?
User avatar
Charlie J
Senior Member
Posts: 2207
Joined: Jun 29th, '06, 09:14
Location: freeport n.y

Re: STRUTS & RUDDERS

Post by Charlie J »

if someone is
blasting in your yard have them hit yours
if not start sanding, or wire wheel
1968 hull # 316 - 757
Snipe
Posts: 462
Joined: Sep 22nd, '17, 14:36
Location: Leonardo N.J.

Re: STRUTS & RUDDERS

Post by Snipe »

I used a combination of sanding,wire wheel,muriatic acid make sure the wire wheel is stainless so you don’t contaminate the metal. Also wear gloves and a respirator. They come out like brand new.
Jason
User avatar
Kevin
Senior Member
Posts: 1069
Joined: Jul 2nd, '06, 19:29
Location: Just north of South Florida

Re: STRUTS & RUDDERS

Post by Kevin »

Try a flap wheel. Heavy sandpaper wheel that goes on a Makita grinder. Don't use it on the shafts but rudders will be fine.
Tony Meola
Senior Member
Posts: 6946
Joined: Jun 29th, '06, 21:24
Location: Hillsdale, New Jersey
Contact:

Re: STRUTS & RUDDERS

Post by Tony Meola »

I have used those abrasive black wheels that goes in a drill. You can find them at Lowes and Home depot. Does a decent job. Otherwise if you want to keep the dust down, paint remover. Put plastic on the ground, then put on the stripper. Let it do its thing and take it off. May need to hit it a couple of times.

Then finish with wire wheel, flapper or the abrasive wheel.
1975 FBC BERG1467-315
Craig Mac
Senior Member
Posts: 711
Joined: Feb 15th, '07, 18:09

Re: STRUTS & RUDDERS

Post by Craig Mac »

I am interested in chemical strippers---anyone have more details?
User avatar
Charlie J
Senior Member
Posts: 2207
Joined: Jun 29th, '06, 09:14
Location: freeport n.y

Re: STRUTS & RUDDERS

Post by Charlie J »

they make stripper for bottom paint use that
1968 hull # 316 - 757
User avatar
Carl
Senior Member
Posts: 5971
Joined: Jul 5th, '06, 06:45
Location: Staten Island NY

Re: STRUTS & RUDDERS

Post by Carl »

I have yet to use a chemical stripper that took off enough layers of paint in one shot to make it worth the effort.
Cost a pretty penny, gotta paint the stuff on, let it sit, then you get to scrape the goop off...some into a bucket, other onto the tarp the rest usually on my clothes...yeah yeah I know the white suit thing...but I don't and its on the pants, shirt. Wrap up the tarp and good slips out the sides...walk it over to the yard container...or shove in car and drive over...yep goop in car too.

Then you look at what your working on and know it needs to be done again...

I found a good paint scraper takes off multiple layers in one or two passes. It all falls into tarp and your done.

Sanding is way slow even with an aggressive cutting paper.

4" disc grinder with 36 grit...nice and quick...but you'll have a plume of dust and it can be aggressive cutting. Although struts and rudders can take a cut pretty well...boat hull is another story.
Tony Meola
Senior Member
Posts: 6946
Joined: Jun 29th, '06, 21:24
Location: Hillsdale, New Jersey
Contact:

Re: STRUTS & RUDDERS

Post by Tony Meola »

Believe it or not Peel Away

https://dumondchemicals.com/home-peel-a ... overs.html

https://dumondchemicals.com/home-peel-away-1.html

Put it on, cover it so it stays wet, follow their directions, and let it sit overnight. It will get you down pretty far, then use an abrasive wheel to clean it up.

Nothing will get it down to bare metal, since metal has crevices in it.

For things like the rudders and possibly the struts, you can put a garbage bag over them and close it up for the night. Shafts a little tougher but you can open the bag and wrap it around the shaft and tie it on.

I have stripped metal, not bottom paint, but metal with multiple coats of paint using Citrus Peel. Had to put it on twice in some areas. Covered the metal in plastic and let it sit overnight. I was amazed at how much paint came off.
1975 FBC BERG1467-315
User avatar
Rawleigh
Senior Member
Posts: 3435
Joined: Jun 29th, '06, 08:30
Location: Irvington, VA

Re: STRUTS & RUDDERS

Post by Rawleigh »

A needle scaler works well on them if you access to air.
Rawleigh
1966 FBC 31
Tooeez
Posts: 266
Joined: Jun 24th, '14, 19:51
Location: Palm City, Fl

Re: STRUTS & RUDDERS

Post by Tooeez »

A really sharp 1/2" wood chisel works better than a scraper, and way faster than chemicals.
User avatar
Carl
Senior Member
Posts: 5971
Joined: Jul 5th, '06, 06:45
Location: Staten Island NY

Re: STRUTS & RUDDERS

Post by Carl »

https://www.jamestowndistributors.com/u ... o?pid=3495

When I said scraper I meant a HD carbide tipped scraper you use with two hands, draw back while pushing down a bit...an inch wide blade...but when you get it right many multiple coats of paint are off in one shot with little effort. I started with disc grinder...but found the scraper worked better.
Stephan
Senior Member
Posts: 655
Joined: Mar 30th, '11, 05:41
Location: Providence, RI

Re: STRUTS & RUDDERS

Post by Stephan »

Carl's scraper will do the job. A little heat or IR http://www.silentpaintremover.com/spr/index.htm will help the scraper too.
Not a fun job but good to have it done!
Best,
Stephan
Possunt quia posse videntur
Post Reply

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: Google [Bot] and 468 guests