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9 comments
Please visit the following links,
http://www.paintlifting.com/
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oqj2aalTLOE. (Airplane specific, but can be used on composite bicycle frames).
Good luck
Be very careful. I did this to a black-painted Trek that had cracked (and Trek' s sh*t warranty didn't cover) and couldn't tell if I was through the paint until I was most of the way through the carbon. I would echo the comments saying don't try and take it down to the carbon as you'll never achieve the pre-paint bare carbon finish and will probably bugger the frame.
How are you going to paint it afterwards? I’ve had fun with spraydotbike acrylic rattle cans. A world away from the old school cans.
Agree with comments above - wet n dry back to a sound smooth surface, no need to go all the way down.
I wouldn't even bother painting it.
Just scuff the paint so the new paint has something to bite into no need to really tke it down to the carbon .
Bear in mind there will probably be a lot of filler inder the paint, where the trapped air from the mould left voids that needed to be filled before painting. It’ll look like big white, green or yellow patches that aren’t paint, so don’t try to sand them out
Wet & dry and lots of elbow grease, be patient don't try to do it all in a day. By using W&D you can keep an eye on how far your progressing and won't bite into the frame which could compromise your safety.
Fine sandpaper should do it? That's what my bodywork guy seemed to suggest for my car's carbon bonnet. Presumably it's just a case of sanding back to the carbon lacquer?
Try contacting Calfee Design. Craig was a pioneer in carbon frame design & building. Calfee does carbon frame repairs too. email repairs [at] calfeedesign.com, online chat https://calfeedesign.com/ USA PDT.