


Yes we do. A wire brush ( 2 types, cup and flat to suit where we are up to ) on either a 5 inch grinder which i normally use and rick uses a 7 inch grinder with the wire brush on. Once you have done it for awhile , it is not that hard to use them for hours on end. It would be like anything , if you do it long enough , it becomes easier.vincentvega wrote:Do you use a wire wheel on an angle grinder to take all that paint off?
I dont know how you hang on to it for so long. I hate the vibration from those things!!
I noticed you've done the same thing as me with the captive nuts - snapped the bolts that hold the bumperettes on the rear of the brumby... I did this on Sunnie and am yet to get replacement nuts and bolts, I'm just glad I can access the rear nut easy enough to replace with a none captive nut.rtcb65 wrote:
Hey Bennie,El_Freddo wrote:Good stuff!
I noticed you've done the same thing as me with the captive nuts - snapped the bolts that hold the bumperettes on the rear of the brumby... I did this on Sunnie and am yet to get replacement nuts and bolts, I'm just glad I can access the rear nut easy enough to replace with a none captive nut.
Cheers
Bennie
I am not completely sure, i think there was around 14 , give or take.tex wrote:I can't beleive how many spot welds there are holding on that little spare wheel bracket, I'm still in this process!