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Been using this for a long long time...........................

Gino

Premium Subscriber
Been using a zapper for a very long time to remove vinyl,especially hard to get off vinyl. Yesterday, I removed some dark grey from a door and went as normal, got to the red/orange vinyl and it left a stain of yellow on the paint, which I can't get out for sh!t. I'm not sure if it's a stain or the paint got burned, but I've never seen this, as long as I've been using this tool, which like I said..... is a lon-n-n-ng time.

Any ideas. It's a brand new wheel. I might try changing out and putting another one on, but I doubt that's gonna do it.

Everything is metal. If I use a tweezers and heat gun, it doesn't leave any yellow, but it's hard to get off
zapper-grey.jpg
zapper-grey.jpg
, so I don't think any residue has migrated through the vinyl.

The arrow indicates where a registered trademark was. As you can see in these photos, it's almost allows the whole thing to be read, but in yellow, instead of red.

zapper red hood.jpg
zapper register mark and S.jpg
 

Texas_Signmaker

Very Active Signmaker
I'd really like to know too. I had this EXACT same issue happen a few months ago on some oil-field trucks. I tried THREE different brands of wheels and same result.

This happened on one job site and then again on a totally different customer / location / vinyl. I even tried using a different / slower drill.

I never worried about this in the 13+ years of using the wheels until a few months ago. Since then I stopped using the wheels
 

henryz

New Member
What you try cleaning it with? alcohol, citrus cleaner, acetone. I don't believe these will harm the paint job just try it on a little spot. I prefer citrus strip from HD.
 

Gino

Premium Subscriber
The zapper only has two speeds..... on & off.

I think you're talking about a wheel you put on a variable speed drill. Those are basically for removing stripes and small things, but the zapper is for just about anything, with adhesive in back of it.
zapper.jpg
 

jwilde

New Member
Worst case scenario here... Finish taking off the vinyl and wet sand the area with a 1500 grit. Then buff it. I used this method to restore some old porcelain Gas station signs to original after being painted over with an enamel. They were giant signs that took lot of tedious sanding by hand, but the pay was great because the collectors price on those are insane.

Obviously try a small area first.
 

gabagoo

New Member
I had it happen to white ford pickups...thankfully the new logos covered it. I thought it was caused possibly from the rubber nubs being worn down to much, but yours look pretty good and fairly new. I wonder if it is the clear coat burning
 

letterman7

New Member
Compound and wax... nothing else will get it out. I have that happen quite a bit.. the paint is actually cooking a little, just more noticeable on a white vehicle.
 

jfiscus

Rap Master
I'd bet it is a different type of "vinyl" than usual, possibly a real cheap or specialty material that kind of melts as you use the zapper and then transfers a bit onto your wheel which then smears it on the surface.
 
I used the 3M eraser wheel on an old Mack semi with some vinyl that appeared to be metallic silver and I would guess it was nearly as old as the truck judging by it's nearly disintegrated appearance. It left a slight discoloration on the royal blue paint also that couldn't be removed. The customer was okay with it due to the age and condition of the truck, so I left it as was and applied new decals right over the top of it.
 

Gino

Premium Subscriber
No, it's not smeared, not really at all. Where the red lettering WAS, it now looks like a yellow transparent letter. It takes on the shape of whatever was there before.
 

tim99

New Member
letting rapid remover sit on it for a few min. then we hit with alcohol for final cleaning. takes a bit of elbow geese but that combination usually removes the yellowing caused by an eraser wheel for us.
 

GAC05

Quit buggin' me
Geno,
I'm almost 60 now and I've noticed unwanted yellow stains showing up more frequently than before.
Not sure what the solution is but it is most certainly irritating.

wayne k
guam usa

Compounding - clay or even the heavy duty Magic Eraser might do the trick.
 

SignosaurusRex

Active Member
The zapper only has two speeds..... on & off.

I think you're talking about a wheel you put on a variable speed drill. Those are basically for removing stripes and small things, but the zapper is for just about anything, with adhesive in back of it. View attachment 137921

This topic has been covered a number of times here in the past.

In regards to "Speed".... slower speed of the wheel is helpful in some cases. The "Zapper" being a single-speed (high-speed) unit, works okay in most cases but can be a problem in others. There are a few pneumatic (air powered) versions of the "Zapper" style unit (using the same eraser wheel) available on the market. Personally, I prefer the Snap-On® tools ("CrudThug") version. Other brands/models may be found through automotive tool suppliers. These units are a bit smaller, lighter, have a variable speed trigger, and no excess heat up. Yes, it can be an issue if you don't have a source of air.

Those rinky-dink wheels that attach to a drill or die-grinder are far too hard and are made for very small vinyl pinstripes or lettering. Those will burn paint and/or clear-coat very quickly if used improperly. Any of the erasers need to be used at a proper speed relative to type and color of vinyl, base finish (factory vs. repaint) that vinyl is being removed from as well as surface temperature. Most importantly... don't linger the wheel in any one area! Keep it moving.

Certain colors like Reds and Blues seem to be the worst for some reason. I don't know why.
As for vehicle brand (Ford, Chev, Dodge) ...doesn't seem to matter.
On "re-paints"... vinyl is usually applied too soon after the paint has (theoretically) dried. In some cases, the paint will suck some colors and/or adhesives into the paint. Again... brand, type, color and grade of vinyl can play a roll.
Some factory finishes have been known to be a problem. In all of those cases, the paint had not cured long enough before vinyl was applied. Those situations are very rare and have been linked generally to certain brands and models using certain paints.
 

Jester1167

Premium Subscriber
Could it have been a printed graphic and because they didn't let it cure the solvent inks migrated into the paint?

I have seen roofs where the inks bleed through leaving the image behind.
 
I have seen this before on an older vehicle. Body shop guy told me certain wavelengths of light can reach the paint through the vinyl--different color vinyls might have a different effect. Seems reasonable but I can't be sure he wasn't blowing smoke. He said he was pretty aggressive with a very fine polishing (not rubbing) compound and was able to take out the discoloration. Then he polished it. We've also used Mr Clean Magic Eraser with some success to blend in the pristine color under vinyl with the oxidized paint around it. Had to hit it with a bunch of polish after.
 
You know, after thinking about it I have had this happen on white trucks also. Not as bad as what you have there, but a faint yellow... usually behind red vinyl. It also almost always happens behind the vinyl encapsulated 23 kt. gold leaf graphics I take off if they are on white paint, whether I use the eraser wheel or heat and pull. I always figured that was the gold size migrating through the vinyl. It may not have anything to do with it, but I don’t recall it happening recently since I switched to the Dynabrade RedTred eraser wheel on a 7” variable speed polisher/grinder. And a side note... these DynaBrade grinder style wheels work much better in my opinion.
 

Gino

Premium Subscriber
It's done, but there are yellow remains and it honestly looks like the clear/paint is stained. I'm leaning towards the truck being all aluminum. The procedure from painting aluminum bodies is different from steel bodies. Perhaps the aluminum heats up more creating some kinda transfer of pigment in reds. On the same truck, the greys didn't do it whatsoever. We've done lotsa these trucks, but this was the first one to do this.

Thanks for your input and thoughts !!!
 

decalman

New Member
I do this kind of removal all the time I don't use the zapper because the high-speed Burns the surface.

To remove the vinyl is quite simple.
I use a razor blade on a pole, but I take the blade and dull it down on a sharpening stone I use a dull razor blade, then I finesse it at the proper angle and slide right under the vinyl leaving no scratches.

I use my scraper tool in combination with a heat gun & mineral spirits to lubricate the blade on metal. If this doesn't work then I have to crank it up a few notches.

I get a paint brush with some " vinyl off" and brush it on the vinyl. Viny off shouldn't harm a good factory paint job. I test it on the surface first.
Vinyl off, will leave marks on a cheap cargo trailer paint job, but not a good factory paint job on a vehicle.

Wait about 10 minutes and then the vinyl should easily scrape off .
You probably won't even need a heat gun.
 
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