Thanks for taking the time to post the video. The "20 gallons" you speak of. Is that 10gal concentrate and 10gal water (per instructions on the website) or was that 20 gal concentrate and not diluted in your barrel? I was also curious as to any surrounding side effects. As in, splashes on concrete/brick/grass, or your plastic bristle brush, your skin (I was surprised it was clearly splashing on your skin), the plastic home depot tub your rinsed a soaked rim in, etc. Again thanks for taking the time to post a video. My last step in my hobby setup is chemicals. I'm looking at EZ Powder Strip from CC but I am trying to do some homework. Obviously not gonna go with "similar to B17" too gnarly for me IMO.
That 20 gallons was per directions so 10G concentrate 10G water. I have not noticed any side effects from the splashing, the pavers don't have any bleached out spots, the tubs and brushes are all just fine. It's still not fun to get on your skin and the fumes are pretty nasty but if you keep that in mind when you're working with it and stay ventilated and do a better job covering your skin than I did and this stuff is the bees knees. It's not cheap but it's inexpensive compared to most powder coat strippers out there. B17 probably works better at lower temperatures but that's some pretty gnarly stuff to work with as I understand it. Hope you get your hobby setup going the way you like, I've really enjoyed it myself.
I just got Greensolv wheel strip I’ve heard it’s much less harsh as compared to b17 and others I haven’t tried it yet but I got 55 g of it. I hope the results are as well as yours
I'm sure it will be, I'm also pretty sure it's performance will depend on the temperature just like the Strippaint. Good luck I hope it works great for you!
Hello I bought 4 5 gallon strippaint 9900 and I mixed it with 20 gallons of water in a 55 gallon drum and I have 3 heating bands on it. So I got the temp up to 215 degrees F and I’m stripping some aluminum jeep fenders and I left it in the drum with another drum on top of the drum the fender was sitting in and I left it in there for about 2 hours and it didn’t strip nearly as well as your rim did. I live here I. Texas and it is around 55 to 60 degrees outside. I’m wondering what I’m doing wrong. Any advise
That really sucks, sorry to hear it. From how you explained it your mix is the same as mine 1 for 1 with water and your temp is great so this is a head scratcher. Most likely thing I can think is that maybe the fenders aren't powder coated? The peeling off effect as far as I know is primarily on powder coat where your paint job is essentially a sheet of melted polyester. After 2 hours if that was powder coat it should have sloughed right off, in those conditions probably in 30 minutes or less. I would find something you KNOW is powder coated and put it in there for 30 minutes.
Ok and yes the fenders aren’t powder coated instead they are painted mat black. The paint has come off about 3/4 of the way. But I have had them in there about 3 or 4 times after power spraying them off each time and putting them back in the drum for a couple hours each time. I may need to try another paint stripper that is a bit stronger but you are correct about the fumes that come off this paint strip 9900. It is very strong lol. Thank you for reaching back out to me
The fumes suck, that's why I was doing it outside. I would wear an organic vapor respirator or have a very powerful ventilation hood built above it. The fumes are why I did this video outside in the winter.
I bought the Electron E-Coat Master box feed, it's a serious machine that I've been taking some time to learn. It's very similar to a Gema, really nice machine but there is so much more control available it's a bit of a learning curve. I'll put a video out on it probably after the fourth of July. I just finished powder coating my first set of wheels with it so that will probably make the video. It's a HUGE step up from the Hyper Smooth 03 LED I've been using from Columbia Coatings.
I've put about 8 hours of soak time on it so far, it shows no signs of degrading or contamination. In fact the black powder coat that sloughed off into the chemical from this job sat in the drum for 4 months before I had a day to clean out the barrel and the chemical still looked exactly the same.
Great video! Thanks for the review!
Thanks for taking the time to post the video. The "20 gallons" you speak of. Is that 10gal concentrate and 10gal water (per instructions on the website) or was that 20 gal concentrate and not diluted in your barrel?
I was also curious as to any surrounding side effects. As in, splashes on concrete/brick/grass, or your plastic bristle brush, your skin (I was surprised it was clearly splashing on your skin), the plastic home depot tub your rinsed a soaked rim in, etc.
Again thanks for taking the time to post a video. My last step in my hobby setup is chemicals. I'm looking at EZ Powder Strip from CC but I am trying to do some homework. Obviously not gonna go with "similar to B17" too gnarly for me IMO.
That 20 gallons was per directions so 10G concentrate 10G water. I have not noticed any side effects from the splashing, the pavers don't have any bleached out spots, the tubs and brushes are all just fine. It's still not fun to get on your skin and the fumes are pretty nasty but if you keep that in mind when you're working with it and stay ventilated and do a better job covering your skin than I did and this stuff is the bees knees. It's not cheap but it's inexpensive compared to most powder coat strippers out there. B17 probably works better at lower temperatures but that's some pretty gnarly stuff to work with as I understand it. Hope you get your hobby setup going the way you like, I've really enjoyed it myself.
I just got Greensolv wheel strip I’ve heard it’s much less harsh as compared to b17 and others I haven’t tried it yet but I got 55 g of it. I hope the results are as well as yours
I'm sure it will be, I'm also pretty sure it's performance will depend on the temperature just like the Strippaint. Good luck I hope it works great for you!
Cool setup. Just curious why did you go with StripPaint 9900 over StripOxy 6842?
I didn't find any videos on StripOxy, the Strippaint I've seen work in a video. Otherwise, no reason. Have you used StripOxy?
I have not. Supposedly the StripOxy works faster. The advantage I see to strippaint is that it is safe on magnesium parts.@@galtsgarage5775
Hello I bought 4 5 gallon strippaint 9900 and I mixed it with 20 gallons of water in a 55 gallon drum and I have 3 heating bands on it. So I got the temp up to 215 degrees F and I’m stripping some aluminum jeep fenders and I left it in the drum with another drum on top of the drum the fender was sitting in and I left it in there for about 2 hours and it didn’t strip nearly as well as your rim did. I live here I. Texas and it is around 55 to 60 degrees outside. I’m wondering what I’m doing wrong. Any advise
That really sucks, sorry to hear it. From how you explained it your mix is the same as mine 1 for 1 with water and your temp is great so this is a head scratcher. Most likely thing I can think is that maybe the fenders aren't powder coated? The peeling off effect as far as I know is primarily on powder coat where your paint job is essentially a sheet of melted polyester. After 2 hours if that was powder coat it should have sloughed right off, in those conditions probably in 30 minutes or less. I would find something you KNOW is powder coated and put it in there for 30 minutes.
Ok and yes the fenders aren’t powder coated instead they are painted mat black. The paint has come off about 3/4 of the way. But I have had them in there about 3 or 4 times after power spraying them off each time and putting them back in the drum for a couple hours each time. I may need to try another paint stripper that is a bit stronger but you are correct about the fumes that come off this paint strip 9900. It is very strong lol. Thank you for reaching back out to me
The paint is actually called E-coating which is a lacquer and paint
@@thawise3572 That should come off pretty good with regular stripper, good luck and I hope it works awesome for you down the road!
Thank you
That’s awesome, but what about the fumes?
The fumes suck, that's why I was doing it outside. I would wear an organic vapor respirator or have a very powerful ventilation hood built above it. The fumes are why I did this video outside in the winter.
Any info on your new powder coating setup you mention in this video?
I bought the Electron E-Coat Master box feed, it's a serious machine that I've been taking some time to learn. It's very similar to a Gema, really nice machine but there is so much more control available it's a bit of a learning curve. I'll put a video out on it probably after the fourth of July. I just finished powder coating my first set of wheels with it so that will probably make the video. It's a HUGE step up from the Hyper Smooth 03 LED I've been using from Columbia Coatings.
How many times were you able to use that batch of chemical?
I've put about 8 hours of soak time on it so far, it shows no signs of degrading or contamination. In fact the black powder coat that sloughed off into the chemical from this job sat in the drum for 4 months before I had a day to clean out the barrel and the chemical still looked exactly the same.
Where did you buy the stripper solution?
generalchem.com/product/strippaint-9900
I forgot to put the link in the description, adding it now.
Bonjour,le fût métal est en inox ?
I don't think so, I'm pretty sure it's mild steel.