I have one and very impressed with it,very easy to use and great results. Only problem is getting it back from friends who have borrowed it to see how it works! They all love it and want to keep it! When you do the math it works out as a total bargain.
I bought one of these and I like it. It is a solidly built unit that is well balanced for hours of work. I am half way through stripping a big 50's car. I wanted something more forgiving than a typical rotary grinder and I don't have any serious gouges in the metal yet. The media lasts long than you would expect. I will only need 2 - 3 media drums for the whole car and you can get them cheaper on Amazon.
@@FranksShitBoxCollection Yes, the quality is good, the price is good. My only gripe is that they include a second "finishing" cylinder that I don't need. So the price could be even cheaper if they would sell just the black abrasive cylinder.
I check with my industrial guys and there are a couple of mfg of this type of machine... one is air the other electric. the big difference is the cost. Those machines start about $500 - the wheel size is the same. This is a great deal, and I purchased one and cannot wait to use it on paint and surface rust on my projects.
Finally affordable saw something like this go for around 800~ bucks. BTW if anyone work in a shop environment these are also perfect on Aluminum Rims, Mating surfaces and other automotive area's it's not just for the Body Shop guys
So I got the sct and used it on my 56 Chevy I'm restoring. It worked wonders and I have already recommend it to a few people. My question it what would be the best way to remove the paint and crap from the door jams and other books and crannies that the sct couldn't get to.
not knocking eastwood in any way, but metabo has had this tool out for a long time. I'm definitely glad to see a much lower price for the same tool though.
This tool looks way less expensive than sand blasting. Have you done a comparison between this tool and sandblasting, for cost and results? I typically use paint stripper and sandblast the hard to reach areas. I hate doing that because it makes such a mess. Thanks!
Do you have anything for those hard to reach places like tail light housings and door handle enclosures? I'm planning a project, I pretty much made up my mind that i'll be getting the SCT, just wondering about less flat areas where the SCT cant get to.
Good quality 240V to 110V portable transformers are readily available and cheap in Europe. I bought a Carrol & Meynell 3000W (continuous) to run my American market 110V Hilti. It is common in UK building sites to run only 110v tools.
They showing bits and pieces.. there is not one video of anyone stripping a whole project with this thing it will strip but it takes forever it's heavy u need a pallet of disc and it wears you out quick if you think I'm lying you can use mine for yourself
I have one and very impressed with it,very easy to use and great results. Only problem is getting it back from friends who have borrowed it to see how it works! They all love it and want to keep it! When you do the math it works out as a total bargain.
I bought one of these and I like it. It is a solidly built unit that is well balanced for hours of work. I am half way through stripping a big 50's car. I wanted something more forgiving than a typical rotary grinder and I don't have any serious gouges in the metal yet. The media lasts long than you would expect. I will only need 2 - 3 media drums for the whole car and you can get them cheaper on Amazon.
Think I could get a link for those Amazon drums?
@@FranksShitBoxCollection www.amazon.com/gp/product/B01LJ324V4/ref=ppx_yo_dt_b_asin_title_o07_s00?ie=UTF8&psc=1
@@andrewhudson3723 thank you for the link. Is the quality of these pretty good or you get what you pay for?
@@FranksShitBoxCollection Yes, the quality is good, the price is good. My only gripe is that they include a second "finishing" cylinder that I don't need. So the price could be even cheaper if they would sell just the black abrasive cylinder.
@@andrewhudson3723 oh alright I see now.
I check with my industrial guys and there are a couple of mfg of this type of machine... one is air the other electric. the big difference is the cost. Those machines start about $500 - the wheel size is the same. This is a great deal, and I purchased one and cannot wait to use it on paint and surface rust on my projects.
I just purchased this last night! Can’t wait to try it out on my 56 f100 that I’m restoring! 👍🏽
I want to see a comparison between this and the Metabo please. Head to Head action.
This would be great for a Delorean with its stainless body for that brushed finish
Finally affordable saw something like this go for around 800~ bucks. BTW if anyone work in a shop environment these are also perfect on Aluminum Rims, Mating surfaces and other automotive area's it's not just for the Body Shop guys
So I got the sct and used it on my 56 Chevy I'm restoring. It worked wonders and I have already recommend it to a few people. My question it what would be the best way to remove the paint and crap from the door jams and other books and crannies that the sct couldn't get to.
not knocking eastwood in any way, but metabo has had this tool out for a long time. I'm definitely glad to see a much lower price for the same tool though.
The Metabo is on sale now for $640 from $1142.00! Crazy money either way.
@@wheelstandr I want that Metabo!
This tool looks way less expensive than sand blasting. Have you done a comparison between this tool and sandblasting, for cost and results? I typically use paint stripper and sandblast the hard to reach areas. I hate doing that because it makes such a mess. Thanks!
Aloha! Has this tool been used on fiberglass boats to strip/surface/prep old epoxy paint?Thank you.
Très bon produit, merci beaucoup.
I love it! I need this for my ratrods..
But when are you getting it to Europe ??? ;)
Do you have anything for those hard to reach places like tail light housings and door handle enclosures? I'm planning a project, I pretty much made up my mind that i'll be getting the SCT, just wondering about less flat areas where the SCT cant get to.
I'ma use my Dremel for all the hard to reach areas
I have one, works great! Drums are pricey though.
hows it work on ol mopar's seeing their made of ol beer cans ....
What finishing drums are those? About to order and want to know
Does it work?
you really need to make this for the European market as well (110-240V). you’re missing out big sales numbers....
Good quality 240V to 110V portable transformers are readily available and cheap in Europe. I bought a Carrol & Meynell 3000W (continuous) to run my American market 110V Hilti. It is common in UK building sites to run only 110v tools.
Wheres the link for the video!!
hi
Anyone else hear him spit those bars?😂
They showing bits and pieces.. there is not one video of anyone stripping a whole project with this thing it will strip but it takes forever it's heavy u need a pallet of disc and it wears you out quick if you think I'm lying you can use mine for yourself
3:08 to 3:34 is a literal time-lapse showing the process without camera trickery. No one would watch a 4 hour video of us stripping a cab.
So this will make my car SHINY AND CHROME
Sanding this outside and all this paint dust ends where ?????? in the water supply in the food we eat ! thanks clint eastwoods
WAAAAA-WAAAAA!
stripped... not shtripped.
F' me, SOLD AMERICAN...!!!
It will just strip your wallet