Hi,
I got a rod from a clearance bin which was marked as damaged due to some excess epoxy on the guide.
I said "what the heck" and got the rod.
I was thinking of heating the guide to remove it but I might accidentally heat the guide to the point that the inserts will pop out.
Whats the best way to remove the excess epoxy without damaging the rest of the guide. (its fuji alconite).
TIA
Best Way To Remove Excess Epoxy On Guides
Started by
Pinoy_Basser
, Feb 20 2012 05:11 AM
7 replies to this topic
#1
Posted February 20 2012 - 05:11 AM
#2
Posted February 20 2012 - 10:30 AM
Can you send a closeup pic of the guide?
#3
Posted February 20 2012 - 11:30 AM
I's say no to the heat. You may try Lacquer thinner or stripper on a cue-tip. Or a Exacto knife or a small file. Be careful with the insert.
It’s always better to be judged by 12 than carried by 6
#4
Posted February 20 2012 - 12:42 PM
You can try scraping gently with a razor. Don't saw back and forth with it. A little heat (no more than your bare hand can tolerate should soften the epoxy enough to peel the excess off with a thumb nail. More than an insert coming out, I'd be careful about peeling back the epoxy off the guide wrap. Denatured alcohol is about as strong a solvent as I'd use.
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#5
Posted February 20 2012 - 12:58 PM
There really isn't a solvent that's good at removing cured epoxy. Denatured alcohol is among the mildest of solvents and has almost no effect on epoxy, in fact I use it to clean surface stains on epoxied crankbaits. I'm with DVT about using a razor blade or Xacto knife to remove it. Moderate heating with a hair dryer first will make it softer.
#6
Posted February 20 2012 - 07:19 PM
If you're handy with wrapping, I would remove the whole guide and rewrap then apply finish to your liking.
2005 Princecraft w/ Mercury 30HP 4 stroke
#7
Posted February 20 2012 - 08:11 PM
Thanx guys.
Tried getting a pix but my crappy camera is not helping.
Judging by the location of the epoxy, I suspect it was dried with the guides positioned below the rod and slowly dripped to the guide frame and insert. If you look thru the guide you can see a bit of epoxy on one side covering about 1/8th of the guide diameter.
Will try to put it under the knife method suggest by DVT tonight.
Thank you All.
Tried getting a pix but my crappy camera is not helping.
Judging by the location of the epoxy, I suspect it was dried with the guides positioned below the rod and slowly dripped to the guide frame and insert. If you look thru the guide you can see a bit of epoxy on one side covering about 1/8th of the guide diameter.
Will try to put it under the knife method suggest by DVT tonight.
Thank you All.
#8
Posted February 21 2012 - 11:48 AM
I had a little epoxy on guides before and it came off very easy with a knife. As long as its not bonded to the rest of the epoxy it should chip off the ceramic cleanly.
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