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-   -   This Plasti Dip product is Awesome! (http://www.the370z.com/exterior-interior/40677-plasti-dip-product-awesome.html)

My_third_Z 08-26-2011 03:35 PM

7 Attachment(s)
Time for the painted wheelbarrow pictures. I'll discuss my experience after an explanation of the photos.
1. Shows the water beading capabilities, thank you hurricane Irene.
2. Is after a quick drying. Notice the line between the plain Plastidip and the part sprayed with enamel and clear coat.
3. Just another angle.
4. My initial scuff mark.
5. Peeling a piece back.
6. After about one minute of effort.
7. The average size piece that was coming off.

The paint job looked really good. Other than some dust that settled on it while drying, it looked like a pretty decent finish. It was smooth, much like the paint on a car, so it didn't have any of the feeling of plain Plastidip. I bounced a rock off it with no damage. I didn't try throwing it at 45 or 50mph, like highway speeds, so I can't tell you about how well it would hold up to that.
The removal was a bit slow. As you can see, I didn't manage to get any pieces larger than my fingertip. If I attempt to remove the entire amount that I painted, I may develop a better technique and get bigger pieces.

Conclusion: I think it would look good on the car when covered with regular paint and clear coat...just be prepared for some work if/when you decide to remove. Long term quality is assumed to be pretty good.

Alchemy 08-27-2011 01:59 AM

Lol good R&D +1

ALX370Z 08-27-2011 04:09 AM

Going to experiment with Plasti-Dip for the first time next week! Gulp kinda nervous as I've never painted anything before. Comforting knowing that you could peel it right off if you messed up :icon17:

Alchemy 08-27-2011 09:30 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by ALX370Z (Post 1284058)
Going to experiment with Plasti-Dip for the first time next week! Gulp kinda nervous as I've never painted anything before. Comforting knowing that you could peel it right off if you messed up :icon17:

Dont be nervous. Mask it off really good. I also suggest a day or two of dry time before you remove the masking. Like you said if you mess up or dont like it you can just peel it off. It really is that simple. Have no fear, paint away!

TongMan 08-27-2011 06:05 PM

Uploaded a new video for you guys wanting to Plasti Dip your wheels.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zkkAwWLgxDI

Jonathan Vach 08-27-2011 08:11 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by M.Bonanni (Post 1254495)
No there's no silver showing on the handle unless you physically have the handle pulled out. I sprayed inside the area where your fingers go, just not the area that gets exposed when you pull the handle.

What did u use to clean the area before spray it?

thanks

Synack 08-27-2011 11:14 PM

Just plasti-dipped my sunglasses, my xbox, and my android phone case. :)

Synack 08-27-2011 11:26 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by My_third_Z (Post 1283295)
Time for the painted wheelbarrow pictures. I'll discuss my experience after an explanation of the photos.
1. Shows the water beading capabilities, thank you hurricane Irene.
2. Is after a quick drying. Notice the line between the plain Plastidip and the part sprayed with enamel and clear coat.
3. Just another angle.
4. My initial scuff mark.
5. Peeling a piece back.
6. After about one minute of effort.
7. The average size piece that was coming off.

The paint job looked really good. Other than some dust that settled on it while drying, it looked like a pretty decent finish. It was smooth, much like the paint on a car, so it didn't have any of the feeling of plain Plastidip. I bounced a rock off it with no damage. I didn't try throwing it at 45 or 50mph, like highway speeds, so I can't tell you about how well it would hold up to that.
The removal was a bit slow. As you can see, I didn't manage to get any pieces larger than my fingertip. If I attempt to remove the entire amount that I painted, I may develop a better technique and get bigger pieces.

Conclusion: I think it would look good on the car when covered with regular paint and clear coat...just be prepared for some work if/when you decide to remove. Long term quality is assumed to be pretty good.

When peeling it off of my wheels I tried about 6 different techniques.

What works the best:
- A standard micro fiber rag works
- Having a hose with a constant flow of water assisting removal.
- WD40 definitely does something to the plasti-dip to make it fall apart. Just be careful what you use it on. Worked fine on my wheels.
- Once it is up, you may or may not have a mess of plasti-dip particles, Stainless Metal Polish works MAGIC, it just wipes this stuff away perfectly.

What didn't work:
- Any household cleaning product, needs heavy duty car spec cleaning products.
- Anything but a standard micro fiber rag worked terribly. A micro fiber fluffy thing failed miserably, paper towels, etc etc, they all suck.

Recommendations:
- Use a hose and your hands. The water really hardens up the plastic and it makes for removing bigger pieces much easier, also it cleans up the area much better and you will have virtually no mess in the end. For those places that the hose and yours hands can't do so well, just use the microfiber rag and maybe MAYBE some WD40, but you'll have to clean up in the end with the Stainless Metal Polish.

My_third_Z 08-28-2011 04:10 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Synack (Post 1285049)
When peeling it off of my wheels I tried about 6 different techniques.

What works the best:
- A standard micro fiber rag works
- Having a hose with a constant flow of water assisting removal.
- WD40 definitely does something to the plasti-dip to make it fall apart. Just be careful what you use it on. Worked fine on my wheels.
- Once it is up, you may or may not have a mess of plasti-dip particles, Stainless Metal Polish works MAGIC, it just wipes this stuff away perfectly.

What didn't work:
- Any household cleaning product, needs heavy duty car spec cleaning products.
- Anything but a standard micro fiber rag worked terribly. A micro fiber fluffy thing failed miserably, paper towels, etc etc, they all suck.

Recommendations:
- Use a hose and your hands. The water really hardens up the plastic and it makes for removing bigger pieces much easier, also it cleans up the area much better and you will have virtually no mess in the end. For those places that the hose and yours hands can't do so well, just use the microfiber rag and maybe MAYBE some WD40, but you'll have to clean up in the end with the Stainless Metal Polish.

Do you think the WD40 would penetrate the clear coat and enamel enough to have an effect on the Plastidip?

happytheman 08-28-2011 08:56 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by TongMan (Post 1284691)
Uploaded a new video for you guys wanting to Plasti Dip your wheels.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zkkAwWLgxDI

Dude that's awesome! Ima forward this to a friend that's really interested in doing his wheels! It looks really quite good too! :tup:

Synack 08-28-2011 11:55 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by My_third_Z (Post 1285218)
Do you think the WD40 would penetrate the clear coat and enamel enough to have an effect on the Plastidip?

You mean if you painted over plastidip? I think it should work if you let it sit and saturate for a minute.

gufazi 08-28-2011 05:25 PM

Has anyone tried this with their brake calipers? I'm thinking red...

ChipsWithDips 08-28-2011 05:35 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by gufazi (Post 1285845)
Has anyone tried this with their brake calipers? I'm thinking red...

I would not recommend trying it. This stuff is not rated for nearly a high enough temperature for that.

Red__Zed 08-28-2011 05:37 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by gufazi (Post 1285845)
Has anyone tried this with their brake calipers? I'm thinking red...

This stuff is rated to 200F. Brakes are going to exceed 400F during a normal drive.

tjlazer 08-28-2011 05:41 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by gufazi (Post 1285845)
Has anyone tried this with their brake calipers? I'm thinking red...

Don't think thats a good idea as they get really hot, don't want a melting rubber mess do you?


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