Removing dents with dry ice???

Scud1373

New member
mmmm... didnt really know where to put this thread so id thought over here would be ok? if not, admins can move it. ok anyway, before any flaming occurs, i want to say that i read this off another site and it seemed to spike my interest so id thought id ask the professionals. i just discovered a ding the size of a nickel on my door and its bugging the hell out of me. so before i decide to spend a hundred bucks at a local dent remover shop, i read on some forum that your suppose to heat up the dented spot, apply dry ice on it with gloves, and the dents suppose to pop back out. yup, thats it and people said it worked. im just curious now if its bs or not. any comments on this ?
 
remember if you mess it up it will more than the 100$ at the dent man, if it does work im sure it takes some practice and id sooner play around on a old beater first
 
I've actually taken the time (and trouble) to try this. No Luck. None, zip.



Conceptually, this could work, but the very real stress put on the paint could crack it!!!



Not a good idea.



Jim
 
I remember seeing this done a few times at an old body shop I used to hang around in. BUT, he would strip the area of paint, heat it with a torch, then use the dry ice to pop the dent out. It was never perfect but it was less body filler he would have to use.
 
I have seen this work on hail dents that are shallow without any kind crease like you would get from a door ding. It doesn’t always work but after a hail storm I will put plain ice cubes on some the shallow dents and have had some luck and the heat from the sun will take out a few more and the remaining gets fix by the body shop.
 
This technique was invented before the availability of PDR. With PDR, it is a better method than all the dried ice, filler, panel beater stuff that used to be the only route available. So stick to PDR.
 
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