how to remove sap from paint!?!?!
#13
JK Super Freak
Join Date: Mar 2007
Location: Coastal Bend
Posts: 1,769
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
Anything organic will do it. Most hydrophilic solvents won't (that's why soap doesn't work very well, unless it is dish soap made for grease).
Label and sticker remover works just as well, and then you don't smell like gasoline, or at least not as bad.
Label and sticker remover works just as well, and then you don't smell like gasoline, or at least not as bad.
#14
JK Super Freak
Join Date: Apr 2007
Location: Springfield, Oregon
Posts: 1,037
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
AS stated in another thread, butter or peanut butter will take it off and then wash your Jeep with mild soap and water . No harm comes to the paint from using these and it's cheap. Just put a little on your fingers and rub it in. Works great.
#16
Eternal ***erator
Ok, i am not going to mention the "tittles"
but to further this question... (I think it is a good one)
some of the sap from trees around here is like solid granite after the sun gets to it. Die grinders or belt sander hard.
If it gets on the SOFT top... how do you get it off? does that bestop cleaner get it to come up?
#17
JK Enthusiast
Join Date: May 2008
Location: Hilton Head Island
Posts: 113
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
I have pine trees all over my yard and around my driveway. My wife's paint on her Z was ruined because of the sap stayed on there too long.
Rubbing alcohol at walmart. It is called isotoply (sp.) alcohol. It is $0.96. IT WORKS THE BEST. I got that tip from a detailer down here who charges $200+ for a detail. take some on a rag and rub it to the sap, then when it comes off, do it again with a clean rag because it can leave a haze, which is really the sap spread out. The key also is to do it when you first see it. That stuff eats the clear coat and will ruin the paint if you don't get it off.
Rubbing alcohol at walmart. It is called isotoply (sp.) alcohol. It is $0.96. IT WORKS THE BEST. I got that tip from a detailer down here who charges $200+ for a detail. take some on a rag and rub it to the sap, then when it comes off, do it again with a clean rag because it can leave a haze, which is really the sap spread out. The key also is to do it when you first see it. That stuff eats the clear coat and will ruin the paint if you don't get it off.
#18
JK Super Freak
Join Date: Apr 2007
Location: Deptford NJ
Posts: 1,121
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
Creamy smooth or crunchy peanut butter? Jif or Skippy or Peter Pan?
#19