Best way to remove jack mount putty??

I'm continuing to refurbish my 1995 LaVeta. Taking off the jack mounts to zip strip, grind off rust and repaint.

They've got a bunch of white putty on them. Any tips for removing this gunk?

Heat gun and a scraper??

Thanks
 

shanz3n5

Adventurer
pics? that should get the large amounts, im thinking acetone or lacquer thinner with plactic scrapper for residual
 

1stDeuce

Explorer
I beg to differ... Pictures will not remove large amounts of anything... :)

Seriously, is it the grey putty stuff that you can just scrape off, or is it white silicone? If it's silicone, I'd head for a wire wheel on a drill or a flapper disc on an angle grinder, as not much will touch it. Just see what works, and if you're repainting them anyway, it's no big deal to use a little more force than necessary. :) You could always have them sandblasted. Probably wouldn't cost much. Check around. Most powdercoat shops will sandblast, then powdercoat.
 

shanz3n5

Adventurer
1stDeuce --- your correct, pics dont remove anything. Asking for pics to the problem area before i sent advice out. If the paint is good and zero rust or corrosion, i would only grind, sand, or blast if i was for sure going to refurbish or repaint. cleaning on other hand can be time consuming and may alter the paint coating. (hence lacquer thinner could remove paint if paint is old.
if it is a silicone base, a plastic scrapper and acetone with elbow grease. so pics would help.... not remove. but if waterwind- is going to repaint and or restore i am a fan of blasting. i've done it with many part on motorcycles, trucks, etc. good luck and would love to see before and after.
 
I've got the brackets off, putty is off(used a heavy duty scraper), used zip strip to get off the old, peeling paint,ground off all old residue to bare metal- have my 3rd coat of primer on...

Now I'm in the process of cleaning out all the old dirty putty from the window seems and all other seems in preparation of applying new sealant to all possible spots where water/moisture could get in...
 

Scoutman

Explorer
I just went through more of this than I can to ever do again so I'll pass on my lessons I've learned the hard way over the past year. Here's the pile of butyl tape that I have peeled off my camper during the roof overhaul process. Some of it is old stuff and some of it is new excess trimmings.

As you found out, use a putty knife to remove the bulk of the butyl tape. What type of knife you use will depend on what surface it is stuck to and what the condition of the tape is. Metal or plastic. Plastic dinner knifes work pretty good in some cases too. For me, I used a metal flat blade putty knife to gently scrape the flat surface of the camper to get most of it off. Since the skin of my camper was Filon (gel coated fiberglass sheet) I was able to use Acetone to get rid of the residue. If it's in a crack or tight spot then I would dip a plastic cleaning brush in acetone and scrub the surface to get clean and then wipe with acetone rags. If the tape is on painted metal then I would advise against anything acetone unless you plan to repaint.

Warm butyl tape is sticky butyl tape. Getting it off, it's better cool. Putting new parts on, it's better warm (stickier and squeezes excess out). If you don't squeeze out the excess then when it does warm up and you put a load on one of those jack brackets then it will come out thus loosening the bracket bolts.

After putting everything back together and cutting the excess off (putty knife on edge) I caulked the borders to keep it from coming out and make a cleaner seam. All the seams that had unsealed butyl had turned nasty over the years of collecting dirt.

IMG_20140503_190918_785 (Large).jpg

They make a gray and a white in different thicknesses, shapes, and widths. Not sure color matters in most cases cause not much of it shows.
 

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