Home » This Cheap Tool Is Great For Getting Stubborn Decals And Residue Off Of Your Car

This Cheap Tool Is Great For Getting Stubborn Decals And Residue Off Of Your Car

Adhesive Remover Wheel
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There is one thing that will usually stop me from buying a car, no matter how much I like it otherwise: I’m always turned off by business marketing decals and graphics. Those stickers are generally truly stuck, and never come off easily. And when removed, they almost always leave behind awful residue. 

… Which is a drag, as my Smart has some decals I’d like to get gone. Thankfully, I’ve found a tool just for this job, and I wish I’d discovered it sooner. It’s a drill-powered rubber eraser wheel that zaps decals off of your car in just minutes – but there’s a catch.

I have a rule with most of my cars. Decals and stickers have to go on windows, not on the body. In my experience, it’s just much easier to scrape a decal off of a window than the body. Worse, if a decal spends enough time on the body, the paint may fade around it. Then, you’ll remove the decal and end up with more or less a decal-sized paint swatch that’s bolder than the rest of the body. All of that is ignoring what happens when any adhesive gets left behind or, if you’re employing old-school tricks, you accidentally scratch the body.

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I normally avoid all of this by never putting decals on my car’s paint and just never buying cars that have decals on their body, either. The exception to that rule came in the fall of 2020 when I saw the perfect cheap Smart. It was a 2008 Smart Fortwo Passion Coupe and it was fully loaded with every single option checked for just $1,400. The seller noted some issues, but nothing actually serious. The downside? The car still wore the decals of the seller’s defunct IT support business. He couldn’t get the decals off. But hey, for just $1,400 I was willing to look the other way.

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Besides, the reflective-decal character on the side of the car looked cute.

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Unfortunately, I discovered pretty much instantly that removing what was then 12-year-old decals was going to be next to impossible. My mechanic friends suggested I attack the decals with a razor blade. This method did work, but progress was annoyingly slow. I would remove maybe about a millimeter of material per minute and if I wasn’t perfect, I’d nick the car’s paint while I did so.

Other people suggested using my fingernails, a heat gun, a credit card, a window scraper, or even chemicals. While I have used the heat gun and credit card method to great success in the past, all of those decals were usually not that old and were still pretty pliable. In this case, these over-decade-old decals were now super brittle. It didn’t matter what combination of the above process I used, the decal just chipped and broke off a millimeter at a time. Look, I don’t have time to spend an entire day chipping at a decal like it’s an ancient artifact. I want it gone, now.

Sadly, that “now” never happened. I went on to use the car on the Tennessee Gambler 500, breaking the vehicle’s plastic panels on some huge rocks at a waterfall. I would later park the car and daily drive some Volkswagens. Fast-forward to this year and I’ve had the Smart for four years, storing it for two of those years. Yet, throughout all of this time, I still haven’t found the solution to getting rid of those decals.

As I wrote in the past, I’m selling off every car that I don’t consider to be a favorite car or a dream car. The upshot of this selling spree is that I’m daily driving Smarts again as I no longer own my old Volkswagen daily drivers. Unfortunately, this also means rolling around with the name of a defunct business on my bumpers and safety cell.

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A desperate Amazon search brought me to a listing for a CowboyBOB 2 Pack Decal Remover Eraser Wheel – Rubber Eraser Wheel for Drill Removes Car Stripes Vinyl Tapes and Graphics Rubber Eraser Wheel Tool Kit for Cars, RV, Motorcycles Sticker Remover Tool.” Oy vey, what a listing name. However, the tool had 4.5 stars with 400 reviews, most of them saying that the tool is effective.

Here’s how it works: You attach the wheel to your power drill and then let it rip. These wheels use abrasion to erase decals, adhesives, pinstripes, tape, and stickers off of various surfaces. I did some research and discovered the name-brand version of this tool is the 3M Stripe Off Wheel. It’s a tool with 5,311 mostly positive reviews on Amazon. It was also around $50 when I priced it earlier this year, however. Now you can get it for about $42 on Amazon.

I went with the knockoff “CowboyBob” version for only $16 after tax for two wheels and started watching videos about rotary decal-remover tools. As it turns out, the fluted style (like my CowboyBobs) might not be the best, as shown by YouTuber Gander Flight:

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Maybe I should have watched videos before making my purchase of the fluted wheels, but oh well. I had the wheels already, so I might as well use them. Last night, I rolled my Smartie next to the garage and let the CowboyBob rip.

My setup was pretty basic. I used an $18 Warrior corded drill from Harbor Freight. This thing is a total weakling and says it maxes out at 3,000 RPM. I use it for general work around the apartment and for basic car stuff. As it turns out, this kind of drill is perfect for the task of forcefully removing decals from a car. Both the 3M Stripe Off Wheel and the clones recommend a speed no faster than 4,000 RPM, which is great because my drill can’t even spin that fast.

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Thankfully, I also had much better results than Gander Flight with my fluted wheel. Maybe it was the ancient, now 16-year-old decals or maybe it was me putting a little pressure on the wheel, but the decals stripped off of the Smart’s metal lightning quick. Forget about a minute per millimeter. I had both sides done in only 15 minutes!

This tool didn’t come with an instruction guide, so I sort of just experimented on my own. I used medium pressure and made sure the tool didn’t stay in one place for any longer than about a second or so. It seemed so long as I did that, the decals came off cleanly and without major damage to the paint underneath.

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I also angled the tool a bit, which seemed to be more effective than laying it flat on the car’s metal.

I experimented further by spritzing a little bit of water on the surface to see if that changed the performance, but this made the tool totally ineffective. It seemed the best way to use the tool was just directly on the surface without any modifications.

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Since this Smart has been a bit of a guinea pig for the crazy stuff I wouldn’t do with my other cars, I tested what happens if strong pressure is applied without moving the tool. I was surprised to find the rubber wheel didn’t burn all of the way through the paint. The only bad spot was a place where the paint was already damaged on my car. However, I would still try to keep the tool moving just in case.

I also tried to use the tool on the Smart’s plastic parts. The makers of these tools don’t recommend using them on plastic, but again, this car is basically my equivalent of the Autopian Test Car. Sure enough, the tool immediately wore through both the decal and the paint on my Smart’s tailgate.

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I then tried to refine my tactic, applying only the lightest of pressure and barely spinning the drill at all. That didn’t work, either. Even at a slow rotation speed, the rubber wheel ripped through both the paint and the decal pretty much instantly.

But hey, I did make some great progress here. The car’s safety cell looks better than it ever has under my ownership! Now, I just need to figure out how to get rid of the phone number on the website on the back of the car. I think I’ll be keeping the helicopter hat character guy because it’s just my kind of silly. I just don’t want to continue advertising some guy’s defunct business.

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After sanding down the decals.

So, I’m going to need some help here. How do I get rid of the decals on the bumper and tailgate? The decals don’t respond well to heat or traditional scraping methods, but this abrasive method is overkill. I’m not sure what to try next here.

That said, if you have pesky decals, stickers, adhesives, tape, or similar stuck to a surface that’s metal, glass, or maybe fiberglass, it seems like one of these rubber wheels should do a great job at making removal so much easier. It seems like the name-brand 3M version works the best, but also costs the most. However, I found that at least this clone version also works fine for less than half of the cost.

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I wish I discovered this tool sooner. This just opened up a wider net of cars I’m willing to buy now, so long as they don’t have decals on plastic, anyway.

Note: This post includes Amazon referral links, so if you buy something after clicking one of these links we might get a commission. Just FYI!

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Luvmeadeadpedal
Luvmeadeadpedal
30 days ago

I think we have all battled with this at one time or another and into struggled until I found this:

Rapid Remover Remover 32 oz. Bottle

You used to only be able to find this at TAP plastics but now available on Amazon and it is truly amazing at removing sticker goo. Also used it on tree pitch for amazingly easy cleanup.

Thoroughly tested by me on all sorts of sticker goo and can help loosen existing stickers if you get an edge up.

Kelvin
Kelvin
30 days ago

Avoid using those – they’re a great way to burn through clear coat, and are mostly unusable on plastics.

Use a heat gun set to 400F and a plastic razor blade, available in 20-packs at any hardware store for about $3. Heat the decal edge for a 5 seconds or so with the heat gun, catch the edge with the plastic razor blade, lift it, then peel the rest of the decal by hand by heating it just in front of where you are pulling. They’ll come off without too much hassle.

Once removed, use lacquer thinner on a paper towel (wear gloves!) to remove the residue.

Micah Cameron
Micah Cameron
30 days ago
Reply to  Kelvin

There we go! I was about to write the same thing. Were you a detailer at some point?

Shinynugget
Shinynugget
30 days ago

I have the same decal rule for the same reasons. Glass only!

Elhigh
Elhigh
30 days ago

Spritz a little Goo Gone at the edges of the phone number digits, walk away. Do it again tomorrow. And the day after. Keep it at, just a little spritz, for a week or so. Let the stuff soak through the plastic and work in from the edges of the stickers. Then go after it with a spudger or guitar pick or some other less-aggressive fingernail substitute. It has been my experience, when working with automotive stuff that is more stuck than you’d like, you hit it with some kind of chemical loosening agent but loosen your timeframe considerably. Let the chemical do the work for you, but give it time to get the work done.

Sid Bridge
Sid Bridge
30 days ago

The plastic panel on my ’93 Miata was cluttered with an old stick-on chrome dealer logo and a stick-on chrome Texas Longhorns logo. I used Goo-Gone and let it soak around the edges, then worked very slowly and carefully with a razor and they thankfully didn’t put up much of a fight. Was able to clean off the leftover adhesive pretty easily, too. I feel like I got lucky though. Also, my paint is in pretty terrible shape so I wasn’t as worried if things got a little botched.

Squirrelmaster
Squirrelmaster
30 days ago

I’m going to give one of those wheels a shot this weekend. I just bought a new project vehicle that has the “Protected by Clifford” stickers on the fenders (the fenders!) from the 90s that need to come off. I fully expect the paint to be faded around the Clifford stickers, but I can live with that better than the stickers themselves. It also has several questionable bumper stickers that I can’t abide, though they aren’t as old as the Clifford stickers, and since they are on painted steel bumpers I can just rattle-can those back to black if the paint faded around them.

Erik McCullough
Erik McCullough
30 days ago

My go to is heat, plastic razorblades (a hard to find thing except Amazon) and some goo gone. I’ve never had to tackle as much as you, but it’s relatively fast.

Paul B
Paul B
1 month ago

As someone who took all the decals off of a travel trailer, my words of wisdom:

Get the genuine Wonder Wheel, even better than the 3M.

Get a can of 3M adhesive remover. It won’t touch the paint, but will dissolve any glue out there:

https://www.3m.com/3M/en_US/p/d/b40070712/

and fun fact: 3m.com can also be typed as mmm.com

Frederick Tanujaya
Frederick Tanujaya
30 days ago
Reply to  Paul B

cool fun fact, thanks for sharing 🙂

Twobox Designgineer
Twobox Designgineer
1 month ago

Acetone is great at dissolving most adhesives. While it removes fingernail lacquer, it shouldn’t affect automotive paint, and did no harm in taking @#$&%& factory stickers and logo off my Wrangler. It will eat some plastics but not touch others, so testing is necessary for your bumpers.
Keep it away from acrylic (plexiglas / PMMA) since that is one that it acts quickly on. Actually, it is used in small quantities in manufacturing things out of PMMA. It is used to weld pieces together. Done properly, it slightly melts both sides, then evaporates away leaving an invisible joint as if it were all one piece.

Nathan
Nathan
1 month ago

Have you tried Goo Gone Automotive? It says it is safe for plastic.

Vee
Vee
1 month ago

From my experience of removing melted on magnets, decals, tape stripes, and dealership stickers (may your fingers never curl you horrible people), there’s only one method that actually really works. And it takes a while.

A sponge fully submerged in isopropyl alcohol for ten minutes (throw a rock on top of it, that’s fine) and fishing line. The sponge is porous enough to grab the edge of whatever it is and pull it away but soft enough it won’t damage the paint. The isopropyl alcohol delaminates the plastic and deconstitutes the glue. The fishing line is so when you get enough of a peeled edge you just lace it underneath and saw like you’re flossing between your teeth.

Bags
Bags
30 days ago
Reply to  Vee

I’ve never tried fishing line on the type of decals above. I can attest that it works great on badges or anything with foam core tape.
Also, I was familiar with these rubber wheels, but again only to remove the leftover glue residue from the foam core tape. You know when you have glue left from a sticker and if you rub your finger on it it consolidates into those little beads/balls? The rubber wheels do that super quickly.
Using the wheel to abrade away the decal itself seems super sketch.

Andy Individual
Andy Individual
1 month ago

C’mon Mercedes, as a Smartstan, you of all people should know those body panels are meant to be swapped out in this situation. And pulease, mine your collection of Smarts to get at least one set of matching front and rear rims. You’re not a custodian of a ten year old Altima here! Have some self respect.

Totally not a robot
Totally not a robot
1 month ago

I’m more relieved than I reasonably should be to learn that you’re keeping the helicopter hat geek. I always assumed you had him on there on purpose.

Utherjorge
Utherjorge
1 month ago

I have never had any luck with these

Fuzzyweis
Fuzzyweis
1 month ago

I wish I’d known about these when I first got my EV ranger 4 years ago, it had the Ford Electric NiMH and their alt-fuel emblem on the doors and tailgate, I left it on the tailgate but the doors was a bit much, it had an electric sticker below the Ranger emblem, it had Ford Electric NiMH on the doors, and the sticker and the whole logo/electric wording on the tailgate…I think they wanted people to know it was electric.

I went the scraper/sander route, covered it up with paint and OEM decals from a 94 but it’s a bit choppy.(of course all the paint keeps flaking off so should’ve just waited for that 😀

Not sure what to do on the plastic panels, maybe just find another clean one at the pick and pull to swap panels with?

Jalop Gold
Jalop Gold
30 days ago
Reply to  Fuzzyweis

2 thoughts:
Couldn’t you have leaned into it with a “boogie woogie, woogie?”
How are the batteries holding up, want to go Lithium?

Fuzzyweis
Fuzzyweis
30 days ago
Reply to  Jalop Gold

And now that song’s in my head, thanks….

The batteries are doing ok, get about 30 miles of range off-highway which gets me where I want around town.

I’m thinking of going lithium but there’s always a better option on the horizon, sodium, solid state, thorium, how sweet would that be to have a frickin thorium reactor powering it for the rest of my life?

Jalop Gold
Jalop Gold
28 days ago
Reply to  Fuzzyweis

Haha, sorry about the song. that’s great with the batteries. If you ever want to go lithium I’d be happy to help. I keep telling David & Torch I’ll do the Changli, but apparently that is less important than having a working heart or something…

Professor Chorls
Professor Chorls
1 month ago

That looks like a great small battlebot wheel. I’ll give it a……….. whirl

PaysOutAllNight
PaysOutAllNight
1 month ago

I use naptha to clean guitars and it never harms the sometimes delicate finishes. Naptha and a plastic scraper would be my first try. I’ve used it to remove old stickers from an old Fender bass.

Second try would probably be a brief soak using naptha on a paper towel, covered with plastic wrap to prevent it from gassing off too fast.

Last edited 1 month ago by PaysOutAllNight
Vee
Vee
1 month ago

Guitar picks also work, especially the nylon ones. I keep a small .097mm guitar pick around just to scrap stuff without scratching it. The nylon will give and deform before it ever breaks through clearcoat.

Angrycat Meowmeow
Angrycat Meowmeow
1 month ago

The 3M style is worth its weight in gold. When I Bought my V Sport it had pinstripes and they had to go. It literally just erased them. They’re amazing. The finish underneath was completely unmarred. The one I used is ABN brand from Amazon and they’re $12.

Crank Shaft
Crank Shaft
1 month ago

Have you tried Xylene or MEK (Methyl Ethyl Ketone)? One of those two should dissolve pretty much any decal adhesive. Make sure to test it on you plastic surfaces first just in case. However in my experiences I’ve not had any damage.

It’s pretty much the same as the WD40 / Credit Card process, but leaves less mess. Apply a little to an edge, scrape, apply more, scrape, repeat. A final wash with a soaked rag usually leaves a nice clean surface. Maybe apply a little wax after to protect said surface.

PaysOutAllNight
PaysOutAllNight
1 month ago
Reply to  Crank Shaft

MEK is literally paint remover. I’ve used it on old cars to strip them to bare metal.

It’s not something I’d use on a painted surface unless I want to reprime and repaint it when I’m finished.

Crank Shaft
Crank Shaft
1 month ago

Are you thinking of methyl chloride or sodium hydroxide?

MEK shouldn’t do anything like that to modern cured paint. Maybe older paints if soaked. I’ve used MEK to de-badge cars with nary a mark. I stand behind my suggestions.

PaysOutAllNight
PaysOutAllNight
30 days ago
Reply to  Crank Shaft

Methylene chloride is also paint remover, and by what I can tell, is considerably stronger at it than MEK. That’s the really good stuff you can’t get very easily anymore.

The stripper I used contained both. Based on your comment, I’m guessing the MEK was a secondary agent of action in that compound.

I’d still use naphtha. I believe naphtha is much safer on paints and plastics than MEK.

Crank Shaft
Crank Shaft
30 days ago

Naphtha is also a great suggestion.

Kevin Rhodes
Kevin Rhodes
1 month ago
Reply to  Crank Shaft

If you try these – and I agree they should work but test first, wear good gloves and ideally a respirator rated for organic solvents. Those are SUPER nasty chemicals that you do NOT want absorbing into you. Safety last!

I actually really like the helicopter hat dude – it’s just perfect on a Smart!

Crank Shaft
Crank Shaft
1 month ago
Reply to  Kevin Rhodes

My DNA says, Whaaat?

I promise I’ll put on some PPE just as soon as I finish sawing this battery in half.

Last edited 1 month ago by Crank Shaft
Kevin Rhodes
Kevin Rhodes
30 days ago
Reply to  Crank Shaft

LOL – you mean three-headed kids are a bad thing?

Crank Shaft
Crank Shaft
29 days ago
Reply to  Kevin Rhodes

Well mine sure is a pain in the ass, but the one with two heads is better than one.

Cheap Bastard
Cheap Bastard
25 days ago
Reply to  Kevin Rhodes

Sir Robin seems to think so:

https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=cFdgjYoBMIg

Jdoubledub
Jdoubledub
1 month ago

Floss+heat is my go-to for removal and not damaging the surface.

Daniil Ivshin
Daniil Ivshin
1 month ago

I’ve got some 25yr+ old adhesive that was holding on monsoon shields above the windows. I was trying to get rid of it, but it’s now rock hard.

Have tried a wheel like this but didn’t seem to do much. Also trying to chip or peel them off pulls off some paint.

Any ideas?

Crank Shaft
Crank Shaft
1 month ago
Reply to  Daniil Ivshin

Uh, see my post above. Solvents can be your friend, but they can also dissolve window gaskets too. I would try some MEK first on a rag.

Andrew Daisuke
Andrew Daisuke
1 month ago
Reply to  Daniil Ivshin

soak/dab the remaining residue with a citrus based solvent, let it get tacky (might take a few application) then hit it with the eraser wheel again.

Crank Shaft
Crank Shaft
1 month ago
Reply to  Andrew Daisuke

Citrus usually leaves a residue which is why I prefer solvents for these situations. That said, I love Orange Clean and have spent many hours being slightly nauseated by its potent permeating aroma.

Joke #119!
Joke #119!
1 month ago

“In the morning, the decals mysteriously reappeared…”

Andy Individual
Andy Individual
1 month ago

For less aggressive adhesives like on price stickers or those endless lawyer labels telling you in fifteen languages not to put your children in the microwave, plain old cooking oil or even mineral oil works. You need to give it time to soak a bit, maybe even peel up a corner on plastic stickers so the oil can soak in under it. The good part is it is low odour and usually leaves a clean finish.

Bags
Bags
30 days ago

Fun fact, if you cake your hands or clothes or whatever in oil based glues but don’t have any oil around to clean them up, peanut butter works because of it’s high oil content.

Knowonelse
Knowonelse
30 days ago
Reply to  Bags

So should butter. I use butter to remove pitch from both my cars and hands.

10001010
10001010
1 month ago

I’ve had good success soaking decals in PAM cooking spray for 5-10 minutes then just rubbing it with a wet washcloth. I might try one of these wheels next time though!

EXL500
EXL500
1 month ago

Decals? WD-40 and a credit card, works a charm.

Captain Muppet
Captain Muppet
1 month ago
Reply to  EXL500

This summer I spent an entire weekend with a can of WD40 and the end of an old plastic UK number plate (like a credit card but stiffer) and took the huge dealer-fitted stripes off the side of my fiancée’s Suzuki. They’d been on there for seven years.

It was horrible, but it worked great. Every now and then a bit would peel off in a single foot long strip, and it felt amazing.

EXL500
EXL500
1 month ago

Credit where due: I saw it on YouTube and it worked.

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