Mipa Quick Paint Stripper and Mipa Paint Stripper Spray help remove unstable old coating before the panel is rebuilt. Keep stripper work away from plastics and rinse or neutralise the surface before priming.
Guided Shopping · old paint removal
Old paint should be removed when it is cracked, unstable, too thick or likely to fail under new coating. After stripping, the panel needs thorough cleaning, corrosion aware primer work, sanding, colour and clearcoat.
Mipa Quick Paint Stripper and Mipa Paint Stripper Spray help remove unstable old coating before the panel is rebuilt. Keep stripper work away from plastics and rinse or neutralise the surface before priming.
Mipa silicone remover in liquid format and Mipa silicone remover spray remove wax, grease and silicone before sanding or coating. Clean again after sanding so dust and fingerprints do not sit under the new finish.
Mipa EP Primer Surfacer with the matching EP hardener and EP thinner gives direct adhesion and corrosion protection on prepared steel, aluminium or zinc. It is the stronger primer method for bare or sensitive metal.
MP ColourCheck Spray helps assess the colour and finish before the final clearcoat decision. Mipa Control Spray helps reveal sanding marks and low spots while the surface is still easy to correct.
Mipa 2K Acrylic Primer Filler and Mipa Fast Filler Spray build a sandable base over repaired or keyed areas. They help level small scratches and sanding marks before the colour layer.
Mipa BC Ready Mixed Two Layer Basecoat creates the matched colour layer on the prepared panel, while Mipa BC Thinner VDG supports the spray viscosity required by the BC system.
Mipa 2K HS Clearcoat CC 8, Mipa 2K HS Hardener HS 25 normal and Mipa 2K Thinner Normal V 25 form the gloss and protection layer after the basecoat has flashed.
The MP sanding block keeps hand pressure even across the repair area, panel edge and primer surface. A flat block helps avoid waves that become more visible after gloss clearcoat.
Use the paint stripper method only on suitable metal areas, then remove residue carefully before any primer is applied.
Remove wax, grease, dust and loose contamination from the stripped panel. Check whether the existing coating is sound enough to sand, or whether deeper repair work is needed first.
Key the surface evenly and remove sanding dust before coating. Use guide or colour checking where it helps reveal scratches, low spots or uneven preparation.
Apply the suitable primer or primer filler for the exposed substrate and repair depth, then sand the dried primer until the surface is smooth enough for colour.
Apply the matched colour in controlled coats over the prepared base. Keep the repair edge soft so the new colour can visually blend with the surrounding finish.
Apply the compatible clearcoat system after the colour layer has flashed. Let the coating cure before polishing or putting the panel back into normal use.
Use liquid paint stripper for larger metal areas and the spray format for smaller controlled sections.
Use EP Primer Surfacer on exposed metal before the colour build so the repaint starts from a protected base.
Use 2K Acrylic Primer Filler or Fast Filler Spray after the stripped panel needs filling and final sanding before colour.
Strip only as far as needed to reach a stable foundation. Sound original coating can often be sanded, but failed layers should not be trapped under new paint.

















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