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04-11-2013, 08:46 PM | #1 |
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49 3100 ready to sandblast frame. a few questions.
hi, i am new at restoration and this is my first project. i have been reading on here for a while. now getting to work on my 49 3100. i am trying get it looking nice and still keep it as original as practical for regular use. i have it down to the frame and ready to get that blasted. i have a few questions.
what do i need to do after frame is blasted as far as prep to get ready to paint? can just i use por-15, or is there something else better if it is blasted? how much, if any, blasting can i do on the front axle, springs, spindles, rear differential and driveshaft housing and ect without getting sand in someplace where it will be a problem? should i completely dissemble and rebuild the front end? kingpins seem tight, but truck has been used. i bought it from the original owner and it is mostly complete and original with 50k miles. it has the usual rust places and wear parts. i drove it for several years before starting the restore. i am having a professional repair the cab. thanks!
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1949 chevy 3100, 5 window 1992 chevy k1500, extended cab, short box 5.7l 1996 chevy k1500, extended cab, long box 5.7l 2001 chevy impala ls 3.8l 1965 honda s90 |
04-11-2013, 09:55 PM | #2 | ||||
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Re: 49 3100 ready to sandblast frame. a few questions.
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Sounds like you got a good one! Curious, why not do the rust repair yourself? I've not welded and if you check my thread I am starting MIG welding with a used 110v Hobart this weekend. It isn't THAT hard and you'll pay through the nose for a pro to do it....without truly knowing how good/bad a job he did...possibly til years later. Just my $.02, but I bet a few will agree. Keep the photos coming and good luck! |
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04-11-2013, 10:06 PM | #3 |
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Re: 49 3100 ready to sandblast frame. a few questions.
Truck looks to be in pretty pristine shape! As for the paint por 15 and similar chassis paints like chassis saver will stick to a clean blasted frame just fine. Where the paint won't stick is a perfectly smooth piece... for example on a newer vehicle if you were to remove the factory rubber coating and exposed the smooth factory metal. Sand blasting chews up the surface enough to promote adhesion.
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91 s10 - bagged bodydropped 4", 350/700R4, narrowed reared, cantilever rear air bag setup 1951 chevy 3100 - in build/acquiring parts process. Have full C4 Corvette suspension front and rear, tpi 350, 700r4, 18" torque thrust II wheels |
04-11-2013, 10:46 PM | #4 |
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Re: 49 3100 ready to sandblast frame. a few questions.
I agree with Latin frame. pOR 15 sticks great to sandblasted metal. I've done it to 2 frames now. On one after the POR 15 we roughed it up with a scotch bright pad and used some of the POR15 chassis paint over it. The POR15 as it is will fade eventually.
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Mathew 1947 Chevy 3600 1951 GMC 100 1969 Chevy C-10 396/500hp TH400 lowered 4" 1968 Imapla Custom 396/325hp TH400 "Grandmas Car" 1976 Crew Cab 4x4 diesel http://67-72chevytrucks.com/vboard/s...d.php?t=488505 1978 Chevy K-10 454 1983 S10 4x4 "Bumblb" (Grandpa's truck) 1993 Chevy S10 V8 conversion 1990 Ford Probe Gt 1992 Dodge W-150 "Old Man's Truck" 1992 Pontiac Grand Prix SE 1992 Mercury Grand Marquis-Mercruiser 2000 Ford F150 (Currently my mother drives this) 1946 Farmall H with Stan Hoist loader 1965 John Deere 110 1961 Wheel Horse " Rat Tractor" |
04-12-2013, 02:13 AM | #5 |
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Re: 49 3100 ready to sandblast frame. a few questions.
ask were you are getting it blasted, I just did my frame and they said if I did blast and powder coated it would be $250 or $175 for just blasting
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04-12-2013, 06:35 AM | #6 |
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Re: 49 3100 ready to sandblast frame. a few questions.
Like the Truck man
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1971 GMC Sierra 1959 GMC 100 |
04-12-2013, 09:21 AM | #7 |
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Re: 49 3100 ready to sandblast frame. a few questions.
thanks for the replies. i am here to learn as i have no idea on much of this stuff. i sent the cab out because i have no good experience welding sheet metal. cab needed cab corners, door bottoms, floor. the frame is rusted and covered with lime dust in every nook and cranny.
i just called a powdercoater and for around $200 he will do it in black, colors extra. blasting at $65/hr. is powdercoating a good way to go with a frame? is there a downside to it? any special prep besides blasting? i have seen jobs where rust gets under it and it peels off in sheets. |
04-12-2013, 10:52 AM | #8 |
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Re: 49 3100 ready to sandblast frame. a few questions.
Is Frames cast iron, and are they still like that today ?
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1971 GMC Sierra 1959 GMC 100 |
04-12-2013, 10:55 AM | #9 |
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Re: 49 3100 ready to sandblast frame. a few questions.
What vehicle frame was ever cast iron? Old tractors where the motor and transmission were the actual frame.. but thats about it.
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91 s10 - bagged bodydropped 4", 350/700R4, narrowed reared, cantilever rear air bag setup 1951 chevy 3100 - in build/acquiring parts process. Have full C4 Corvette suspension front and rear, tpi 350, 700r4, 18" torque thrust II wheels |
04-12-2013, 11:26 AM | #10 |
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Re: 49 3100 ready to sandblast frame. a few questions.
Im not sure thats why I am asking
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1971 GMC Sierra 1959 GMC 100 |
04-12-2013, 12:09 PM | #11 |
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Re: 49 3100 ready to sandblast frame. a few questions.
see if you can find a shop with a 360 blaster were they can hang it and blast side ways, then every thing gets hit
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04-12-2013, 12:36 PM | #12 |
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Re: 49 3100 ready to sandblast frame. a few questions.
2 cents: I painted inside wheel wells and inside fenders w/ ppg dp epoxy primer about 15 years ago. It has stood the test of time; still looks great. The epoxy primer has excellent adhesion, resists rust, can be touched up, top coated or stripped easily; doesn't like UV or abrasion. I couldn't bring myself to use tough under coating because it's no fun to strip. If coating doesn't have adequate adhesion it can promote rust.
dreaming: I would prefer to have frame cleaned to fresh metal then galvanized or dipped like new cars. wondering: How the heat treated big rig frames are protected and how well the coating holds up? Epoxy was popular for industrial applications; may still be? |
04-12-2013, 01:01 PM | #13 |
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Re: 49 3100 ready to sandblast frame. a few questions.
took my frame to sandblaster - had it completly done - powdercoated black - that was 16 years ago - have not had one problem with any of the powdercoat
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04-12-2013, 05:03 PM | #14 |
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Re: 49 3100 ready to sandblast frame. a few questions.
So do you just get all the Loose Rust and then Primer it and then paint it Black ?
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1971 GMC Sierra 1959 GMC 100 |
04-12-2013, 05:34 PM | #15 |
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Re: 49 3100 ready to sandblast frame. a few questions.
Just my 2 cents
I had my frame sand blasted and then had a zinc oven baked (power coater did both for 250.00) followed with epoxy coat( I sprayed it 65.00) over the zinc and satin black frame paint(100.00) over the epoxy If you do this be prepared to paint over the epoxy within the one week window I had bought a sandblaster unit (5 gallon pita) spend the money and have a pro do it same goes for the body blasting have it done by a pro if you have the body done get a coat or 2 of epoxy on it ASAP and the rust is dead in its tracks which will give you time to do the body work at your pace epoxy everywhere in every nook cranny and seam inside and outside |
04-12-2013, 08:02 PM | #16 |
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Re: 49 3100 ready to sandblast frame. a few questions.
Powder coat may be a little overkill for your intentions and it makes you do everything else nice. I probably wouldn't do it for a work/driver truck but I had mine blasted and powder coated with gloss black and I love it. You DO want to pre think everything extra you're going to do to the frame like suspension and steering as you ruin it by doing anything other than drilling holes in it.(carefully)
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04-12-2013, 08:03 PM | #17 |
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Re: 49 3100 ready to sandblast frame. a few questions.
It seems like a pain in the arse, just to teat the Truck all the way down
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1971 GMC Sierra 1959 GMC 100 |
04-12-2013, 08:45 PM | #18 |
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Re: 49 3100 ready to sandblast frame. a few questions.
well it can be a pain but i think it all depends on what you like ! i did mine because i had it torn down all the way - and i figure if i am gonna put on new stuff i might as well do the frame ! caint hurt !!! so i did it - for me it was money well spent - granted its not for everyone but for me i am happy i did it .
good luck on what ever you do !!! |
04-12-2013, 08:48 PM | #19 |
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Re: 49 3100 ready to sandblast frame. a few questions.
It is a pain but powder coating in my experience is more durable and looks better down the road. Make sure you do any welding or modifications before you have it coated. It's a pain to get the powder coating off to weld and wrecks it. I try to plan everything out before starting a project to avoid doing prep or removing parts twice.
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04-12-2013, 09:27 PM | #20 |
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Re: 49 3100 ready to sandblast frame. a few questions.
Sure is pretty speedbump.
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04-13-2013, 12:06 PM | #21 |
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Re: 49 3100 ready to sandblast frame. a few questions.
i blasted my frame with one of those blast-in-a-bucket kits from harbor freight
i did it in stages since i had my cab on when i did the front and rear suspenssion i used por15 and have had no fading in 3 yrs that it has been on the road one thing nice about paint is that when you miss a bracket you can grind, weld and touch up paint
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04-13-2013, 12:23 PM | #22 |
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Re: 49 3100 ready to sandblast frame. a few questions.
Stamped steel and pretty soft at that. Cast iron won't flex much at all before breaking. even though cast iron has more carbon than high carbon steels. The difference is the distribution of the molecules. Think of cast iron like a chocolate chip cookie the chips being carbon. In high carbon steel the carbon is like a chocolate cookie with no chips.
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04-13-2013, 02:07 PM | #23 |
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Re: 49 3100 ready to sandblast frame. a few questions.
It is... Take my advice and don't try it. It's very expensive to put it back together and your truck doesn't look like it needs it. Get it running and safe to drive and then improve it as you drive and enjoy it.
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04-13-2013, 04:09 PM | #24 |
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Re: 49 3100 ready to sandblast frame. a few questions.
Tearing a truck down to the bare frame or not all depends on what we want out of it and how we want it to look when it's done. It should be what you want and not what other's opinion is of what you should do. Since that is what you want go for it.
One piece of advice, clean all of that grease and oil off the frame before you take it to the sand blaster. Also take off any pieces that you don't intend to use so that you aren't paying to sandblast pieces that you don't intend to use. Powder coated frames look great but and it's a big BUT, once you powder coat one you can't do any work on it without ruining the powdercoating. That is ok if you have all of the welding, fitting and grinding done and don't ever intend to make changes but for me who is always changing something it won't work. The finish coat on the frame if you paint it is up to you. Por 15 and or their finish coat, industrial primer and paint or do the prime, sand, prime sand slick paint finish what ever spins your wheels. On the king pins, if they feel real good they were probably replaced not long before the truck was parked and worse case scenario is that you will have to pull it back apart and replace the king pins later with your head up under the fender when you do it. It would be easier to do it now but maybe not a necessity to do it now. On having someone else do the sheet metal repairs. I don't see what the problem with that is. We all know what we can do or can't do or don't want to do. Berating someone because he intends to farm work out is a problem however. I'd much rather see a really nice truck that the owner/builder had farmed out the tasks that he didn't feel up to rather than see one that a guy muddled through and did a half way job on because he thought he had to do it all himself. Keep on with the progress reports, this is looking good.
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Founding member of the too many projects, too little time and money club. My ongoing truck projects: 48 Chev 3100 that will run a 292 Six. 71 GMC 2500 that is getting a Cad 500 transplant. 77 C 30 dualie, 454, 4 speed with a 10 foot flatbed and hoist. It does the heavy work and hauls the projects around. |
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