Right now I have a mouse sander and some 80 grit. You'd figure it would kill the bondo quickly but it gets gummed up really fast. I tried block sanding but the same thing happens. I get these spots of clumped up dust and crap. Should I wet sand ALL the time? IE spray surface with water and go? The few times I did that it just gummed up faster. I don't want to spend an hour just sanding down the first layer. How can I do it faster?
Faster way to sand down bondo?
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If it keeps gumming up the sandpaper after sanding off the top surface of the bondo, you probably mixed it wrong (not enough hardener). I usually start with 40 grit & finish with 80 & then a little with 180 - all dry. A "bondo eater" or air file works best; I assume you mean "DA" not "mouse". :)
Block sanding by hand is the best way to finish out anything.
~ Paul
aka "Tha Driver"
Custom Fiberglass Parts -
I get gummed up even if things are dry/bondo/fiberglass/spray paint. It's really annoying. Maybe I'll try 40 grit.
Block? I just use a block of wood. I have some stuff from autozone but I get the best feel with a good old cut off section of a 2x4.
Status: HG repair. 488wtq though!Comment
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Go to a hardware store and pickup a surform plane (cheese grater) and before the bondo cures and still cheese like consistency you can shape it down.
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Use less bondo next time?
My guess is you are using a palm sander with no dust holes in the paper, am I right? The sanding dust has no where to go and packs itself into the paper. Try using a better quality paper or buy one of these:
http://www.harborfreight.com/sanding...ner-30766.html
And clean the paper before it get really bad.Comment
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Absolutely this^^^ and maybe like said earlier a bit more hardener. Also evercoat is much nicer to work with than bondo.
http://www.evercoat.com/Comment
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Cheese grated on green bonding, block with 40 grit, jump to 80 grit, then 180ish.
Timing is crucial, practice on a junk panel. Catching the mud while still green is the trick.Comment


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