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Thread: DIY: Dent repair with Dry Ice

  1. #1
    Join Date
    Feb 2010
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    San Francisco Bay Area USA
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    DIY: Dent repair with Dry Ice

    I had heard this urban legend that you can repair door dings and dents by rubbing dry ice over the dent and then heating it with a hair dryer or heat gun.

    It seemed simple enough, so I decided to try it on the wife's urban assault vehicle which has its fair share of door dings. I went over to our neighborhood grocery store and got 2 pounds of dry ice for $3.

    Here is the what the test door looked like before the test.



    Essentially the process is to take some dry ice (while wearing gloves, as it is very, very cold), and simply run the dry ice back and forth over the dent until the metal has cooled to the temperature of dry ice.



    This shrinks the sheet metal, and pulls in the dent. Next blow hot air onto the dented area using a hair drier or a heat gun making sure that you don't heat the sheet metal to over 195 ~ 200 degrees Fahrenheit as you can damage the paint by heating any more than that. This will expand the metal and further smooth the dent. After you have the sheet metal hot, then run the dry ice over the dent again until the metal is cooled to the temperature of the dry ice again. It takes about 3-6 times of this hot-cold-hot-cold routine to get complete results, but you will start to see the dent go away after the 1st cycle. Repeat this process until the dent is gone to your satisfaction.

    Your end result should look like this:



    This trick works even better with aluminum panels, does not scratch, discolor or harm the paint because the face of the dry ice on the sheet metal has a thin layer of Carbon Dioxide gas that is boiling off from the frozen dry ice.

    I next tried this technique on a car of mine that has an aluminium body and has a small ding on the left rear quarter panel, and it worked perfectly.

    So $3 worth of dry ice and about 30 minutes saved me several hundred dollars for a paintless dent repair guy to do essentially the same job.

    So from now on never fear when your Golf or GTI gets a ding, just get some dry ice and your dent will be gone!
    Last edited by Orient Express; 28-06-2010 at 07:12 AM.

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Jan 2010
    Location
    Sydney
    Posts
    50
    I would not have believed it, but there you go. an excellent result and a first hand tip thank you
    08 MkV GTI Pirelli --- 65 Split Screen Container Van

  3. #3
    Join Date
    May 2010
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    Sydney, NSW
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    Ha....that's an awesome post, and great info!!!

    Thanks!!! =)
    Scirocco R - Candy White / DSG / Panoramic Roof / RNS510
    Mods - HPA ECU & DSG Stage 2 / VWR Racing Intake / Akrapovic Slip-On Titanium Tips / Milltek DP / HPA Mounts / Superpro LCA / H&R Sport Springs / VMR V710 19x8.5 / Michelin PSS 255-35

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Feb 2009
    Location
    Sydney, Australia
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    Instead of dry ice, you can also use a can of compressed air. Just hold the can upside down and you'll get freezing air. Concentrate on the centre, and work the "cold" outwards. Other than that, it's the same idea that Orient Express mentioned.

    However, this isn't MK6 Golf related... so moved

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Dec 2007
    Location
    Ermington, Sydney
    Posts
    4,421
    It's nice to see someone have a go and actually get results with this method! I wanted to try it ages ago but I'm too lazy to bother finding and buying dry ice haha.
    Mrk Detailing, premium automotive detailing. Paint correction/protection specialist. PM me

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Jan 2010
    Location
    Sydney
    Posts
    50

    Any Boc centre will have Dry Ice
    08 MkV GTI Pirelli --- 65 Split Screen Container Van

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