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Old April 26th, 2008, 06:57 PM   #1 (permalink)
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How to strip mystery paint non-chemically?

Hello, I have an inexpensive Les Paul Custom copy that was primed and sprayed red over the original black finish. I do know, based on the paint chips, that it has white binding underneath so I would like to avoid using a liquid paint stripper so I don't melt the binding. What would be the best way to attack this finish and get it down to the bare wood? Wether or not it's pretty, I plan on spraying a clear finish on it after stripping. How challenging is it to sand an arched top like this? Thanks!

P.S> I have no fear of messing up this guitar, so all medieval suggestions are welcome
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Old April 26th, 2008, 07:34 PM   #2 (permalink)
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I don't think I've ever sanded down a whole guitar but given the bits that I have I predict it's gonna be alot of work.

You might consider using a chemical stripper on the areas away from the binding so that you are only left with the outside perimeter to sand by hand.

With gel type strippers you can get fairly accurate with where you want it. I'd suggest leaving at least an inch or so as a perimeter that you would sand by hand.

There are very mild strippers available as well but my experience with them is kinda iffy. Depending on the finish you're removing they either work very slowly or not at all. You could try a mild stipper over the binding areas and use a cabinet scraper to gently remove the finish going slowly layer by layer. That may or may not be faster than sanding.

That's about all I have to offer.

Edit. I just realized your guitar is an LP copy and not an actual Gibson. In that case I would start with determining whether the finish under the paint job is polyester or polyurethane.

I personally have not been able to use a chemical stripper that will touch polyester. It will lie there and laugh at your feabile attempts. If it's polyester I'm guessing that you may have to sand.

I've used a heat gun and a putty knife before to remove polyester and it worked very well. You could not use the heat gun anywhere near the binding of course but you could basically do what I've suggested above and do the interior area away from the binding with the gun and do the bound perimeter by hand. That is of course if the finish is polyester. If it's urethane than you could use a stripper.

Good luck
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Old April 26th, 2008, 08:01 PM   #3 (permalink)
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If it was me I would try scraping it off. I have scraped by using two hand and bending (just a little) a box cutter blade and dragging it across the finish. Comes off much quicker than sanding. I stripped a Highway One like this, recently. Maybe it will work for you as well.

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Old April 26th, 2008, 08:07 PM   #4 (permalink)
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Ditto on the heat gun and sanding, and watch the bindings.

If that stuff is anything like the coating I just took off from a Japanese RI Strat body, you've got your work cut out for you.
But -- with time and elbow grease it can be done.
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Old April 26th, 2008, 08:23 PM   #5 (permalink)
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As far as that goes, if you DO mess up the binding, you can buy some from Stew-Mac and replace that too...

Cheers, Tim
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Old April 26th, 2008, 08:37 PM   #6 (permalink)
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Grinder with 60 grit on a flexible pad, a deft eye and a stern hand...

...it'd be a twenty minute job. Then another half hour with 100 grit and a small orbital sander. Ten minutes with some 180 grit and you're ready to paint the plywood you've exposed!

PS. wear a decent dust mask. The ones with an out-valve are generally better fitting - you don't want a gap because polyester/polyurethane dust ain't good on the lung.

Grinders are second only to hammers in the fun/destructive tool chest. Have fun!
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Old April 26th, 2008, 08:38 PM   #7 (permalink)
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also

checkout reranch.com - they have a great forum on refinishing. I learned a lot from them.
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Old April 26th, 2008, 11:32 PM   #8 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Nick JD View Post
Grinder with 60 grit on a flexible pad, a deft eye and a stern hand...

...it'd be a twenty minute job. Then another half hour with 100 grit and a small orbital sander. Ten minutes with some 180 grit and you're ready to paint the plywood you've exposed!

PS. wear a decent dust mask. The ones with an out-valve are generally better fitting - you don't want a gap because polyester/polyurethane dust ain't good on the lung.

Grinders are second only to hammers in the fun/destructive tool chest. Have fun!
I did this to a computer case before and it worked quite well (those metal edges rip the crap out of sanders!). My only fear is getting the sides stripped in such a fashion, but remember this is a cheap backyard paint job on top of a cheap (and relatively thin) factory paint job and the top coat I know chips easily, so I might just start by scraping and then move to the sander. Who knows, the factory black finish might be intact w/ some "relicing." I have access to an oscillating spindle sander; would that work well on the sides if I lay the body flat side down?

As for the mask, I learned this before with my power sanding experiences when afterwards I'd blow my nose and my snot was the same color of the paint I was stripping, and fortunately my dad's shop has a Jet air filtration system so I just leave that full blast when the going gets tough.
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