Well, It wasn't easy, but it was effective. I used a combination of mineral spirits and a non-marring chisel (the plastic type) to scrape up all of the rotted asphalt.
So it's a guess that the "padding" on the floor is sound-deadening... is there an easy way to remove it? any tips appreciated!![]()
'70 gt... still a puzzle, one piece at a time...
I found that heating the stuff up only made the removal more difficult. It would get all gooey and non-cooperative. The mineral spirits kind of just dissolved the bond and the stuff came up in big chunks, rather than messy goo-balls...But of course, I also did this in the middle of winter in an un-heated garage, so I guess the suggestion may be to FREEZE the stuff off.
Much like Mr. Sweezy, when I cleaned up the old hardened Ziebart asphalt undercoating in the engine compartment of my Manta, I soaked rags in mineral spirits and covered
the areas I was working on and let it soak in for 20-30 mins and then
scraped the old and now softened asphalt off with scrappers make of
wood and some made of plastic. Worked pretty well.
I also tryed using a hair dryer (I no longer have use for) but that just make the stuff far too sticky.
I like mineral spirits because it isn't nearly as dangerous or harsh on
your skin if any gets on you and it isn't nearly as bad to breath as many other chemical removers.
Actually, placing ice cubes in a plastic bag and chilling the areas made the
undercoating brittle enough to chip off in thicker areas but was taking too long. Might work with the sound padding too.
Last edited by Aardvaark; 06-02-2009 at 09:00 AM.
-Mark
'75 Manta
Direct link to my album of Opel related parts catalogs
and magazine articles for reference:
http://www.opelgt.com/photopost/show...ser/23031/sl/a
I just left mine on. Oh course it still looked like the day it was put onI was lucky
Growing old is mandatory, Growing up is optional
sweet thanks. guess I better go get to work!
'70 gt... still a puzzle, one piece at a time...
I used a metal scraper and lots of hard work. The angle of attack (scraping) makes a big difference. I wasn't worried about scratching the paint as I was already planning on painting the floor before laying down my Damplifier (AMAZING stuff btw.)
I used some prep all (basically mineral spirits) gloves and a ton of rags to clean up the residue.
A lot of people recommend using dry ice to freeze the sound dampening to ease the process.
well, it's taking about forever but it's coming off... just finished the driver seat floor... workworkwork![]()
'70 gt... still a puzzle, one piece at a time...
Once you take the tar off, you will need to clean the area and seal it with a rust inhibitor prior to installing the carpet. You can get a can of bedliner or rubber undercoating and cover the area to protect it. If you don't protect it, it will start to rust through and you can see it in less than a year.
JB
Restore, Customize and Conquer!!!
'73 Opel GT Convertible "Stealth"
'70 Opel GT - 4 speed "Lucy"
'72 Opel GT - 4.0L V6 automatic "Animal"
'72 Opel Ascona 1900 "Junk Yard Dog"
'71 Opel Manta Automatic "Coco"
'72 Pontiac Ventura II SD455 "Monster"
'07 GMC Sierra 1500 - Daily driver
well I'm building it into an auto-x car, so it can look like crap... oh, whole passenger side done![]()
'70 gt... still a puzzle, one piece at a time...
got it all done! the scraper/hammer method works best... and a little heat in the edges/grooves. what do you think the weight savings is with the material out of it?![]()
'70 gt... still a puzzle, one piece at a time...
Sounds like YOU probably lost 10 pounds with all that hard work....don't know if the car weighs any less now, but it all counts in the total combined weight (car and driver) though, right?![]()
rightso maybe I should lay off the oreos...
'70 gt... still a puzzle, one piece at a time...
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