Cliente de
31 juli 2025
Si vas a pintar y tienes q tapar Muebles merece la pena, la pegatina ayuda a definir lo q quieres cubrir y luego solo ir tirando de el plástico, muy cómodo y práctico la verdad, lo volveré a comprar.
N. Walton
26 februari 2025
A little while ago I had a little ding with the car which needed me to get a panel resprayed. The choice was to give £1000 to a bodyshop or just do it myself with rattle cans for under £100. Without a garage and in the depth of winter, the only option was to do it in the kitchen with the doors open, so I needed some protection for the wall and floor behind the part.The plastic is folded up on itself six or eight times in a very well thought-out way. You measure how much width you need to cover, and pull that width off the roll. Then you stick the yellow sticky bit (a bit like how you use a post-it note) at the top-most extent of the space you need to cover, and then you locate thee bottom-edge of the plastic (it's folded over on itself a few times, but relatively easy to find along the opposite edge to the yellow strip), and then pull it out.If you pull it right, and the gods are with you, the sheet just concertina's out and becomes a very long (8 foot from yellow sticky strip to bottom edge) sheet.Now, 8' sounds large, but if you're painting a part with a rattle can, you need a good area covered because the droplets float erratically, so you will probably need one for the bottom 2' of wall and the floor under you, and one part for the 6' of wall behind, which overlaps the floor sheet by a few feet.Why overlap? Because when you're moving around, it's very easy to kick up the plastic and leave a nice little hole that, when you remove the plastic, results in a perfectly shaped black splodge from the paint (assuming you're painting black) :)This means that, if you're painting large car parts, like doors or panels, you won't get all 49' of width, you'll probably get about half that. Enough to paint two or three panels if you're not re-using the plastic.If, however, you're using the sheets for much smaller things, you can pull the sheet out as wide as you like, and get a LOT of use out of this roll. 49' is quite a lot if you're just using it for messy play with the kids etc.So, the plastic itself is pretty durable. I had some sharp-edged panels and they caught on the plastic, but didn't tear it. It's surprisingly resistant, especially for footwear. You'd assume that kicking through it with boots would tear it, but it's quite resistant.So, why "needs to be treated carefully"? Because the yellow sticky strip is only a few cm wide, and doesn't stick THAT well, especially to wood/brick, and totally doesn't stick to stone. If you're not sticking it to perfectly smooth things like cabinets / white goods, then you need to be very careful when you're moving around, or it's quite easy to pull the whole lot down. I tend to put a heavy thing like stepladders at the base of the wall so that if I do kick the plastic when I'm walking across it, the tug only gets as far as the stepladders, and doesn't pull the sticky tape off the wall.When you do remove the sticky tape though, there's no residue, and because it's not duck tape (or similar), it doesn't pull paint off wood.I'm quite impressed by this roll. It did it's job, and I've since found a few other uses for it (such as messy play or protecting the floor when the kids have the paddling pool outside).
Lucky Luke 69
1 januari 2025
Acheté pour protéger des oreillers, vêtements, mais aussi sommiers pour un déménagement.Inefficace car film plastique trop fin et se déchire facilement. D’autre part la bande auto-collante destinée à refermer le film est peu pratique : difficile à décoller et adhère mal.