Remove Paint

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yeknomad
Posts: 4
Joined: Apr 24, 2023

by yeknomad »

Anyone had experience removing paint from a trombone?

Selmer Bach: has one, possibly two coats of primer with paint over the top

It’s not a bad finish, but the sound is pretty dead.

Would just go back to bare brass and wax it
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Burgerbob
Posts: 6327
Joined: Apr 23, 2018

by Burgerbob »

Paint stripper should do it
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yeknomad
Posts: 4
Joined: Apr 24, 2023

by yeknomad »

Sure

Is discolouration of the brass a risk when using stripper?
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BGuttman
Posts: 7368
Joined: Mar 22, 2018

by BGuttman »

[quote="yeknomad"]Sure

Is discolouration of the brass a risk when using stripper?[/quote]

Always. You may (or may not) have to polish up the stripped brass. If you don't do anything after stripping the brass will slowly tarnish and develop a patina.

What kind of paint is on the trombone? Automotive lacquer? House paint? Enamel? Don't know?
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yeknomad
Posts: 4
Joined: Apr 24, 2023

by yeknomad »

Thanks guys

I’m not too worried about a patina, I have a bare brass alto sax I stripped.

A guy at work said some paint strippers ‘may’ damage the brass- I know some strippers react with aluminium, but not sure on brass.

The paint is enamel or automotive.

It’s been primed and sprayed well- but the horn is not very responsive.

I could leave it as is- I’m not a proficient brass player by any stretch of the imagination- but it is an interesting project to strip it back.
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CharlieB
Posts: 434
Joined: Mar 29, 2018

by CharlieB »

Whether the paint is automotive lacquer/enamel, epoxy or acrylic, it can be removed with acetone.

The acetone will not damage the brass. As a test, you can apply fingernail polish remover (acetone and oil mix) to a small area. The paint strippers that can discolor the brass are those containing sodium hydroxide (lye, caustic soda). Automotive supply stores stock paint removers that are essentially acetone in a gel to keep it from evaporating too quickly. A job for outdoors. Acetone vapors are not user friendly. Also need gloves and eye protection. The acetone stripper will turn the paint into a gooey glop that needs lots of water and some scrubbing to remove. The acetone does not need to be "neutralized." It is water soluble and will wash away.
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BGuttman
Posts: 7368
Joined: Mar 22, 2018

by BGuttman »

One caution about acetone: It's very flammable! Don't smoke anything while working with it.

Note that there are also strippers made from methylene chloride in a gel. Methylene chloride is not flammable but is health hazard and should not be used in confined spaces (it tends to replace the air in a room, starting on the floor and working up). Many places have banned use of Methylene chloride.
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yeknomad
Posts: 4
Joined: Apr 24, 2023

by yeknomad »

Thankyou