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Antique Tractor Paint and Bodywork |
Re: Re: Re: What Does DA Stand for on DA Sander/Polisher?
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Posted by Jerry B on December 14, 2001 at 07:32:59 from (162.114.24.120):
In Reply to: Re: Re: What Does DA Stand for on DA Sander/Polisher? posted by Bob K on December 14, 2001 at 05:59:07:
That's the way I did my first few paint jobs: hand sand all the way. Use a sanding block to keep the paper flat. If you use your bare hands you will cut slight grooves into the surface. The paper will not cut as well or last as long either. I would recommend a firm 3M sanding block that you can wrap paper around. A trick that we used to do was find a good, flat, straight wooden paint mixing stick and warp you paper around it. If the weather is dry you can roll the paper into large diameter tubes and these work very well for inside curves. Roll the paper to the desired size and apply light sanding pressure or you will collapse the tube. No damage is done, just creases the paper and makes rerolling kinda aggravating. I have made sanding blocks from a straight section of radiator hose with paper wraped around it. It works well also. Good luck in your endevours.
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