What we are going to demonstrate here today is Fiberglass filler. Where you are going to use fiber glass fillers, if you have panels are welded together, where you need in high strength areas such as in door jams or trunk lid area.
So there is two different kinds of fiber glass filler. There is long haired and short haired. Long haired is just really, really high strength and short haired is high strength but you know it's stronger than body filler.
Why to use fiberglass filler is to keep out moisture from an area like if you had to weld two areas together, just to help to keep out the moisture, just in case, underneath there, pretty much how you apply it, it is just like plastic bottle filler. So we have about culpable size there, so you had an inch or more than an inch, simply just knead it in, well like so, then the panel I have here is simply out of welded two pieces together say like you have the section panel, some thing like that.
Make it one even consistent color, pretty much swap it on.
You can just put body filler on your weld?
Well, we could but again if there is any small pimples you can't see obviously that's going to be where moisture gets through and you don't want that because if it's in between body filler and the paint, it is going to erase the paint, you'll have to go back and repaint it later. So you don't want that.
Now you just play dryer, with some 36 to rough it in, some 80 if you really want to smooth it up a little bit and you could throw your regular plastic filler on top of it.
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