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moab762 Samba Member
Joined: October 09, 2014 Posts: 518 Location: El Segundo, CA
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Posted: Tue Nov 18, 2014 1:20 pm Post subject: Stripping carpet adhesive/tar board from floor/carpet area? |
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Is there a good/cheap alternative for stripping the carpet adhesive spray and tar paper and other gunk from under the carpet? I really don't want to eat into the paint. And I hate using Jasco. It's so caustic and a mess to clean up. It's not like I can hose the inside of my car out. That stuff splatters everywhere and would continue to remove paint from anyplace it hit (dash!). And it would for sure eat the paint that is still there that I would not want removed. Like under the dash where the carpet goes.
I had to clean up the floor on a '49 Lincoln with tar paper that was adhered to the floor. Not sure if it was actual adhesive or just years of being baked on. But it took a damn air chisel to get the stuff off. And even after using the air chisel I was going to use Jasco and repaint. Have not been able to inspect my new '67 yet (being shipped). But the carpet looks og. So I assume there is a mix of tar board and carpet adhesive that has been setting up for years.
I read this thread about Dawn Power Dissolver. http://www.thesamba.com/vw/forum/viewtopic.php?p=7449434#7449434 Which used to be $3 a can. And supposedly worked AWESOME. But now's it's $9.37 a bottle! Dawn must have figured out how great it was.
Any advice before I break out the air chisel? I assume a stronger oven cleaner could handle the carpet adhesive. But if the tar board is stuck as much as my '49 Lincoln. It's going to be a total PITA. I'm having the interior done. And I want to strip off all the crud before having them put down sound deadener and carpet padding.
Last edited by moab762 on Tue Nov 18, 2014 7:50 pm; edited 1 time in total |
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offshores Samba Member
Joined: February 08, 2012 Posts: 1085 Location: So Cal
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Posted: Tue Nov 18, 2014 4:39 pm Post subject: |
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I used a heat gun and a few different size putty knives on my tar boards. For the left over adhesive I believe I used acetone and some rags to clean that stuff off. Probably even used the putty knives there too when the stuff softened up. |
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moab762 Samba Member
Joined: October 09, 2014 Posts: 518 Location: El Segundo, CA
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Posted: Tue Nov 18, 2014 7:48 pm Post subject: |
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I'm wondering if brake cleaner might be a place to start with the carpet adhesive. I've only used it on old gun parts though. Seems to strip paint a little to well. I might just try some simple green soaked over night and covered with plastic bag maybe. If I could just get the adhesive and tar up without disturbing the paint that would be nice. The car was painted not long ago. I mean about ten years ago. But then it was garaged for 10 years.
I'll just start trying some test spot when it gets here. Acetone too maybe on the glue. |
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Mike Fisher Samba Member
Joined: January 30, 2006 Posts: 17970 Location: Eugene, OR
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Posted: Tue Nov 18, 2014 9:20 pm Post subject: |
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Some guys have used dry ice to freeze the tar on pans before chipping it off on Type 3's. _________________ https://imgur.com/user/FisherSquareback/posts
69 FI/AT square Daily Driver
66 sunroof,67,70,71,71,71AT,72,72AT,73 Parts
two 57 oval ragtops sold
'68 Karmann Ghia sold
Society is like stew. If you don't keep it stirred up you end up with a lot of scum on the top! - Russ_Wolfe/Edward Abbey |
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Bobnotch Samba Member
Joined: July 06, 2003 Posts: 22423 Location: Kimball, Mi
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Posted: Wed Nov 19, 2014 8:58 am Post subject: |
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A friend of mine swears by Goof Off for getting ahesives off. Should work good for carpet glue.
I normally just use a DA or my trusty 90* die grinder with those textured grit discs (not actual sand paper).
As for tar board left overs, putty knife and a heat gun should take care of that. _________________ Bob 65 Notch S with Sunroof
71 Notch ...aka Krunchy; build pics here;
http://www.thesamba.com/vw/forum/viewtopic.php?t=249390 -been busy working
64 T-34 Ghia...aka Wolfie, under construction... http://www.thesamba.com/vw/forum/viewtopic.php?t=412120
Tram wrote: |
"Friends are God's way of apologizing for relatives." |
Tram wrote: |
People keep confusing "restored" and "restroyed". |
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hitest Samba Member
Joined: September 30, 2008 Posts: 10296 Location: Prime Meridian, ID
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Posted: Wed Nov 19, 2014 9:45 pm Post subject: |
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offshores wrote: |
I used a heat gun and a few different size putty knives on my tar boards. For the left over adhesive I believe I used acetone and some rags to clean that stuff off. Probably even used the putty knives there too when the stuff softened up. |
This is exactly what I had to do to approx. 20 sq. feet of my '66 microbus. Took a long time- but came out clean. I saved myself a cue ball-sized glob of the tar to remind myself never, ever, embark on a similar project again. _________________
EverettB wrote: |
I wonder what the nut looks like.
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'62 L390 151, '62 L469 117, '63 L380 113, '64 L87 311, '65 L512 265, '65 L31 SO-42, '66 L360 251, '68 L30k 141, '71 L12 113, '74 ORG 181
FU#5 |
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moab762 Samba Member
Joined: October 09, 2014 Posts: 518 Location: El Segundo, CA
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Posted: Wed Nov 19, 2014 10:05 pm Post subject: |
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hitest wrote: |
offshores wrote: |
I used a heat gun and a few different size putty knives on my tar boards. For the left over adhesive I believe I used acetone and some rags to clean that stuff off. Probably even used the putty knives there too when the stuff softened up. |
This is exactly what I had to do to approx. 20 sq. feet of my '66 microbus. Took a long time- but came out clean. I saved myself a cue ball-sized glob of the tar to remind myself never, ever, embark on a similar project again. |
Good one, Hitest! lol! |
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jeston Samba Member
Joined: July 22, 2004 Posts: 14 Location: seattle, WA
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Posted: Sat May 29, 2021 6:31 pm Post subject: Re: Stripping carpet adhesive/tar board from floor/carpet area? |
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Is it always worth removing the tar board? I have a pan that looks pretty solid. I see som minor surface rust around the edge of the tar board. Should I take it all out or leave it? 1958 Baja with ragtop slider that just came into the family. |
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