Has anyone experience of dry ice cleaning / restoration? The results are amazing. Looking to see if it's something I can get done, or better yet, grab a machine myself, perhaps as hire.
I worry about it a bit. In a lot of the vids all they're stripping off is the protective wax coating applied by manufacturers.if you're going to recoat then sure, go for it, be very wary around your paint though.
it's the Karcher vid that's got my attention here:
https://www.kaercher.com/uk/professional/dry-ice-cleaning.html
and I've discovered my local oven cleaning specialist has invested in one of these too. The results on ovens look amazing
Exactly! I was watching that thinking... I paid good money to have that stuff put on my car and that guy is blasting it offI think what they're removing in that karcher vid is actually a wax sealant. I'm not saying they don't work BTW, far from it!
it's the Karcher vid that's got my attention here:
https://www.kaercher.com/uk/professional/dry-ice-cleaning.html
and I've discovered my local oven cleaning specialist has invested in one of these too. The results on ovens look amazing
it's the Karcher vid that's got my attention here:
https://www.kaercher.com/uk/professional/dry-ice-cleaning.html
and I've discovered my local oven cleaning specialist has invested in one of these too. The results on ovens look amazing
it's far more than just stripping the sealant
ok, so to be clear, the complete opposite of what they've used it for in the M5 resto video? GotchaIt's literally a mild sandblasting alternative, it even says in the vid "efficient removal of underbody coating" - ie, it strips whatever's on the surface but uses dry ice particles rather than media / sand / whatever this year's fashion is. Use it if you intend to treat the surface afterwards, but there's zero chance I'd be using it on a painted car which I'm not restoring.