pic says it all
If it's latex, I'd try just a good wash. Provided there was some wax on the surface there, It probably didn't set in. If it's not latex....then I would say just be very careful with the mineral spirits.
I would see what the paint can label says about cleanup. Bmw88rider's suggestions are what I would expect, as good general guidance. If it is hard to remove from some of the surfaces, there is a product called "Oops!" that is specifically intended for removing dried latex paint.
Electric drill, wire brush attachment.
Done!
Much more seriously, is that latex paint? Is it interior or exterior?
If it's latex, it may come off with hot soapy water and some gentle persuasion. It might even peel off after it dries.
Many years ago, I was painting the shutters on my house with an electric spray gun. I'd gone to great lengths to mask the rest of the house from overspray. Unfortunately, I didn't about my car parked in the driveway about 30 feet downwind of the job area.
The wind picked up a little, and when I finished the job, I found my maroon Volvo 240 had turned a nice shade of pink.
It was 95 degrees out. The oil-based enamel had dried instantly. With a little patience, fine compounding polish took it off with no problems. Had to apply it by hand with a pile of rags, because my electric buffer pad would load instantly.
Of course, one half of the car then had a nice shine, so I had to do the rest of the car to match.
Goo gone(the citrus stuff) on a rag, lay on fender, keep it moist. It’ll get through it without hurting the car paint. If you’re adventurous you can try a heat gun, low setting far away just to soften the latex enough to peel.
In reply to Knurled. :
LMAO. Not me this time!
A partners x300 XJR. He's offering it to me cheap, offensively cheap. Runs strong with minor issues. This being the major issue! I'm thinking a fix and flip.
Hummmm. If that is the major issue, I'd jump on that. Being that it's been a year then I'd try white vinegar and then possibly rubbing alcohol first. then is nothing else works then Goof-off.
BTW, You can bring it up to Austin and we can get that solved I'm sure. I've got all of the detailing tools to work over the paint.
bmw88rider said:BTW, You can bring it up to Austin and we can get that solved I'm sure. I've got all of the detailing tools to work over the paint.
That's where the car is. I haven't gotten it yet because I'm out of space lol.
Goof Off and pressure washer seem like the ticket. Followed by a gentle compound and wax. If not, just continue the sharks tooth theme on both sides.
The more I see XJRs around, the more I think I need one in my life.
A cross country roadtrip in a 20 year old Jag doesn't seem like the worst way to fly home.
yupididit said:In reply to Knurled. :
LMAO. Not me this time!
A partners x300 XJR. He's offering it to me cheap, offensively cheap. Runs strong with minor issues. This being the major issue! I'm thinking a fix and flip.
Pressure wash the hell out of it.
A year? Wouldn't have been as difficult to deal with when it happened.
Well, I haven't been active on this forum for that long, but I know that you like your jags.
We used to deal with house paint on cars a lot when I was in school.
We used a razor blade or plastic vinyl squeegee to scrape the house paint off then buffed the paint with a power buffer.
The razor blade method requires polishing the blade and taking the corners off it first. Then you drag the blade.
Edit: Neither method is recommended if the paint has a significant orange peel in the surface.
Razor and clay bar is what I’ve used in the past. Take most off with the razor then clay bar to clean it up. You can also get plastic razor blades that are much safer, but you’d want to softer up with a heat gun first.
Well if it's here.....Shoot, Send me the address and cost and I'll grab it. :P Or just detail it for a small cost. I need something to do next weekend anyways.
Seriously though. PM me if you want some help. We can get that cat shining pretty in a day.
Edit: Found it on Craigslist. That's less than 5 miles from the house. Sounds like a perfect big challenge car to me at that price.
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