
thanks
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how long did you have to soak the vitara to dissolve its arse?A1 wrote: I used 1 to remove all these on the doors
from above to this below (not the best pic but they all came off and with a light polish all the marks were gone .)
slowLux wrote:indeed.mud4b wrote:heatgun is best but also give teatree oil a go... soak it in and it just peels off by hand.
Where can i get that from, supermarket? how much will be needed?
A1 wrote:Go to your nearest Car Panel / Paint consumable seller and ask for a caramel wheels ...they use them to remove stubourn stickers etc
In short its a rubber type wheel that has a shaft moulded into it which you just put into a drill or die grinder .....still need to be carefull not to get the paint to hot but they work awesome the reason they are called caramel wheels as when used they smell like caramel
I used 1 to remove all these on the doors
from above to this below (not the best pic but they all came off and with a light polish all the marks were gone .)
Yeah the wheel arch, it does look standard (the sticker probably is too), but I think it looks dicky. It probably does serve the function of protecting the rear wheel arch from stone chips though (looks plastic). I just like white when it is contrasted with black, and I think going by the photoshop photo there needs to be more black. The black wheels are an excelent start thoughslowLux wrote:the rear wheel arch, thats how it came out from the factory. Or do you mean the flare?
I thought metho did bad stuff to your paintwork?
I'd rather have it like it is in the photoshopped picture, than have the . crap down the sides, reminds of those american cars that had the wood boards down the side!
thankls for all the replies by the way
yeh, my plan is to have it all white and black. Tinted windows, black sliders etc I agree the whilte does need to be broken up a bit, but i think the decals on there are a bit much!Highway-Star wrote:Yeah the wheel arch, it does look standard (the sticker probably is too), but I think it looks dicky. It probably does serve the function of protecting the rear wheel arch from stone chips though (looks plastic). I just like white when it is contrasted with black, and I think going by the photoshop photo there needs to be more black. The black wheels are an excelent start thoughslowLux wrote:.
I wasn't aware of any effects from metho. Doesn't bother me when I took the stuff off dads lux, its getting re-sprayed eventually anyway.
the decals arent that badly stick on, the thion stripes arent anyway. IUf i wanted to i could pull them all off with my fingernails!Ezookiel wrote:I know you don't have access to a hair dryer, but then if you have a supermarket to buy the other stuff you'd need, then they sell some pretty cheap junk hairdryers that will do for a one off job.
Hairdryer, and then some goo-remover, did the job for both my Zook, and a mate's Zook. Hardest part was getting the edges up with a razor blade without damaging the paint. Probably better options around for that - such as the caramel wheel mentioned - than the razor blade we used very carefully.
I'm not a fan of large expanses of white, so I tend to agree that in the photshopped version it does look a bit too plain.
I wanted some custom made decal for the front bonnet on my zook because it was too much of a "blank canvas" with all that white and nothing to break it up, but ended up selling it before I got the chance, and I used a bonnet scoops, and a set of tally stickers for the doors, to break the monontony on the Troll. Though it's a two tone, so not quite so bad anyway.
Good luck with it. She's a nice lookin truck.
That's my understanding of it. They were a total pita on the zook until I read to heat them with a hairdryer, and bingo, they came off much much easier, and in much larger sheets. But that was the zook stickers. While I don't see it being much different with your ones.slowLux wrote:....So if i heated them up, then peeled it, theyd come off real easy?....
thanks for the helpEzookiel wrote:That's my understanding of it. They were a total pita on the zook until I read to heat them with a hairdryer, and bingo, they came off much much easier, and in much larger sheets. But that was the zook stickers. While I don't see it being much different with your ones.slowLux wrote:....So if i heated them up, then peeled it, theyd come off real easy?....
Something like this would be thirty bucks or so; the usual suspects like supercheap, bunnings, maybe even the reject shop or crazy clarks/go-lo would have them for anywhere between 15 and 40 dollars I am sure.slowLux wrote:how much is a cheap heat gun?chimpboy wrote:Why would you buy a hair dryer instead of a cheap heat gun? You'll have a lot more uses for a heat gun in future.
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