Bondo Original Filler is a versatile, all-purpose, two-part filler compound designed for interior or exterior repairs in homes and vehicles. It fills small holes, dings, and scratches on cars and around wood. Bondo-Glass is a unique reinforced filler with short, interlocking fiberglass strands and fibers, making it twice as strong as regular body filler. This filler is ideal for repairing automobile dents, dings, and holes faster and easier.
Bondo Body Filler is a two-part putty compound used to repair dents, dings, holes, rusted areas, and scratches in vehicle exteriors. The filler cures fast, shapes in minutes, and is highly effective. It is also suitable for rebuilding rotted or missing pieces of the original vehicle.
Bondo Glass Reinforced Filler is an excellent foundation for hole, dent, and rust-out repairs without the need for backing strips, cloths, and resins. It is available at Lowe’s and can be purchased online or picked up in-store.
Bondo is also known as an auto body filler, an all-purpose polyester putty used to repair cracks and dents in cars, trucks, boats, and household items. The bondo-Glass filler is the fastest drying bondo brand filler, making it sandable in 15 minutes and a game-changing solution for repairing automobile dents, dings, and holes faster and easier.
📹 Bondowhat you need to know
This is not a commercial, it is a complete guide to help you choose the type of materials you need for a specific body damage …
📹 Bondo 265 Lightweight Filler Can1 Gallon
Original formula for repairing dents, dings, holes, large rusted areas and scratches in vehicles Two-part lightweight compound …
The tailgate on my 2007 4Runnner is starting to rust towards the bottom. It’s got maybe a 0.5 inch separation of panel seems on the bottom edge in one particular spot (about about 6-8″ long). My intention is to use some kind of filler there, roughly sand it, apply POR15 over it, then rustoleum paint over that to stop the bleeding (rusting) as much as I can. I was originally thinking the short strand fiberglass would be best since there is a bit of panel separation, but wondering if I should just use the standard filler or the gold?
What type of “Bondo” will i need to prep a bonnet ready for paint? I got a fiberglass bonnet scoop mounted to my bonnet but you can see the outline on where the scoop is sitting on the bonnet.. I want it to look so that the scoop is moulded to the bonnet in one piece.. Not see the lines from the scoop
Strange situation here: Im trying to make a rigid tube out of bondo coating a sonotube/form tube(google for reference) I plan to use the fiber sheets and bondo resin.. Will i be able to sand it down to a good even shape when i finish? Should I use the fiber sheets and bondo resin, let it cure. Then cover in the body filler bondo so that I can sand it down?