I've been a sandblaster(commercial/industrial/marine) for a lot of years, and this is just an amazing method. No major clean up, with a finished product that looks like new. Well done guys, looks great! Cheers from the coast of British Columbia 🇨🇦
@Сергей Иванов Очистка "сухим льдом". Может быть мягкой, а при интенсивной настройке может служить, как "пескоструй". Вот только "абразив" бесследно испаряется, а не остается, в отличие от песка.
@@sereogabattleumca3419 у них нет реагентов, зеленые зажуют. И температура не крутится у нуля погода. Машины не ржавеют так быстро. Откуда вы такие вылезаете? Лишь бы ляпнуть.
@@dont.try.to_search в штатах не сыплют реагенты? и в калифорнии нету минусовых температур? Тахо, среднемесячная температура 7 месяцев в году ниже нуля. А еще там резкие перепады температур и сильные осадки, ну да нуда, не ржавеют там тачки...
In the UK dry ice cleaning is mainly used in industry, cleaning machinery & buildings but there are some companies that are doing it on vehicles too, you can find them on Google
We have done some cars with 300-400.000km and they look just perfect as this one but those cars were from California, Oregon and Arizona not from Finland ;)
unfortunately just electricity when we turn on the machine is around $12 per hour, then Dry Ice, than the labor, then the actually cost of full equipment and of course some profit. So if you mean "cheap" $1-3k per job then yes this is a game changer :)
Wow, that's cool! It looks like a brand new W210. I had one W210 back in the days, I love how it looked, drove and felt but damn it rusted like crazy...
You have to appreciate that this is probably a really clean car underneath anyway, as in the dirt is covering a car that has never been subjected to salt or much rain, mainly sun and dusty roads. Still though the method and results are incredible.
You guys should set up a shop in the northeast. I would definitely being my car to you. You'd do great over here with all of the salt on the road causing underbody corrosion.
Very cool, wish it was near me, and affordable. Of all the cars to collect, why would some pick that wagon, well I don't know much about collectibles anyway.
I never get tired of these videos. Keep them coming! In a future video, can you please show the ground below the car after blasting? I assume all the dirt/grease particles just fall to the ground?