Tip on removing glued on mouldings or rubbers.

Discussion in 'Color is everything!' started by MARTINSR, Jul 24, 2007.

  1. MARTINSR

    MARTINSR Well-Known Member

    A while ago I learned such a neat trick, I just had to pass it on. Most of us have removed some sort of "adhesive" moulding or rubber weatherstrip. We will pull it off, scrape or cut off remainder of the adhesive tape and then use an "eraser wheel" or something to remove what is left. We do new Toyota Camrys for Toyota Motor comany on a regular basis that are damaged in shipment. The front bumpers are commonly replaced or repainted. They have this very rubber seal across the top to seal the hood that you see in the photos. We would pull them off tearing the darn thing all up leaving adhesive tape and torn up rubber on the bumper to remove with the eraser wheel. Then one day, one of the guys removed the bumper and it was in paint looking like it had never even had the darn rubber on it. I asked him how he did it, and a new way to remove items like this was introduced to me.

    What you do is stretch it instead of pealing it off. The first photo shows how you would peel it, the second photo shows it being stretched. We now pull them off and if we had to they could be reused! The one in these photos was in perfect condtion and could have been reused (we never do, Toyota wants new ones) if we wanted. The harder you stretch, the better it works. Even hard plastic mouldings it works like magic. It isn't going to get every one of them off as clean as this, but it will work a lot better than peeling it that is for sure.

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