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Technical ISO a decent drip rail caulk

Discussion in 'The Hokey Ass Message Board' started by bobss396, Jul 5, 2024.

  1. bobss396
    Joined: Aug 27, 2008
    Posts: 18,748

    bobss396
    Member

    I removed the badly cracked drip rain caulk from my Belair the other day. I mean like 100% gone, the metal underneath is fine. I plan to prime and paint over the caulk.

    I got some 3M Drip Chek caulk in a tube. I masked off the roof and the edge of the stainless steel rain gutter. I then applied it per the tube instructions, 1 side only. I believe I removed the masking tape too soon and it disturbed the caulk quite a bit. At the worst I will have to do that side over.

    Last night I made a test-piece using some s**** aluminum sheet. I laid down the tape, applied the 3M stuff. I would say it is now 13 hours "cured". I took the tape off and it still tore the caulk a little. The edge is far from clean.

    I am totally in with using something else, even that caulk tape I had heard about, but cannot easily find. On my Ford, I used a caulk-gun type caulk and it was so hard to apply, I wrecked one caulk gun and my hands were killing me after. I don't think it was a 3M product.

    I have an auto body supply house close by, any suggestions, thanks in advance.
     
  2. spanners
    Joined: Feb 24, 2009
    Posts: 2,197

    spanners
    Member

    We used to apply the 3M dripchek and then depending where it was, just smooth out the edge with your finger. When I say 'depending where it is' means if there is a chance of slicing your finger on a sharp edge use a piece rag with wax and grease remover on it instead to smooth it.
     
    bobss396 likes this.
  3. RMR&C
    Joined: Dec 26, 2009
    Posts: 4,942

    RMR&C
    Member
    from NW Montana

    2 part seam sealer is what I use. It sets up pretty quick. Your paint store should have some and a gun you can rent. Some is DTM and some require primer first
     
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  4. Texas57
    Joined: Oct 21, 2012
    Posts: 3,741

    Texas57
    Member

    2 part 3M PANEL ADHESIVE is what a friend and 3M rep recommended, and it was awesome! It smoothed out so easily for a perfect drip rail, I couldn't believe it. It also has a rust inhibitor, and I believe it can be applied over bare metal or epoxy primer. It sands super easy.
    This was 7 years ago, so maybe they've since added a 2 part (drip rail)/ seam sealer the above members talked about.
     
  5. stubbsrodandcustom
    Joined: Dec 28, 2010
    Posts: 2,598

    stubbsrodandcustom
    ALLIANCE MEMBER
    from Spring tx

    Second this!
    Any seam sealer will work, if there is surface rust there, you may need to give it a treatment first.

    Once you lay a bead down, use your finger dipped in acetone to make it flow stupid smooth over the top. Great finishing technique for getting those adhesives like gl*** on the top side where you can see em.
     
  6. bobss396
    Joined: Aug 27, 2008
    Posts: 18,748

    bobss396
    Member

    Thanks all, I picked up a SEM product locally, $24 a tube, caulk gun type. My mistake with the first one was pulling the tape off too soon and it took the sealer with it. It is quite runny.

    I masked things off as not to get it all over the paint north of the drip rail. I know I have to prime and paint after it cures, trying not to make this a major project. Plus I'm not sure how sandable the new product is.

    I'm lucky to have done just one side. When it was cooler in the afternoon, I went out and removed most of the 3M stuff. Next I'm going back at it with a heat gun and a little mineral spirits as that is easier on the paint than lacquer thinner. I would have to be a brain surgeon with that. How would acetone be? I just want to get as much as possible out, in case the 2 products do not pay well together.

    In comparison, my Ford was one-and-done with that stiff tube of caulk I used.
     
  7. In_The_Pink
    Joined: Jan 9, 2010
    Posts: 978

    In_The_Pink
    Member

  8. bobss396
    Joined: Aug 27, 2008
    Posts: 18,748

    bobss396
    Member

    I wish I had seen those sealers, mine was the standard caulk gun tube. BUT... it worked very well. I had gone out earlier and cleaned more of the 3M stuff off.

    Started on the 3M side since it was the cleanest. That side I needed to do about 75% of the rail and it blended well with the old caulk. I saw that it has a "pot life" of less than 10 minutes, anything past that and I'd have a real mess. The other side was more like 95% and what I learned on side 1 helped a bunch.

    The tape came off cleanly, I went in the order that the caulk was laid down on. I am going to have to go back and fill in some lower areas today. There are not that many. I could try the 3M product, but I'd risk something going potentially bad. Thoughts? I would give the SEM stuff ample time to cure.

    Next I'm going to need to clean the area so I can prime and paint (all rattle can, Transtar primer and paint from these guys: https://www.automotivetouchup.com/?...UYES_mWB1jCTKn42PP2FIgxrgdDCc1tgaAj7jEALw_wcB).

    In the past I have used Prep Sol, no idea if it still exists. I will hit the paint shop on Monday. I'll have the paint in a few days.
     

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