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Before I went that route, I would try chemically removing the paint. Go to Walmart and buy a gallon of "Purple Power" degreaser (or equivalent). This stuff is an amazingly effective and gentle paint remover. Sometimes it takes hours and sometimes days, but it has ALWAYS worked for me and never caused any damage to metal or plastic.

I can tell you what little I've heard.  Soda blasters are a fairly gentle method of abrasive blasting.  I would imagine they would take decals or printing off of painted items fairly quickly.  A baked enamel finish on a die-cast vehicle may or may not come off.  It might take the chrome plating off of plastic, and it may fog (etch) clear plastic windows.

Once again, this is based on what little I've heard and what I assume may result.  Hopefully somebody will chime in with some actual experience using soda blasters for modeling purposes, as I would also be interested in learning more.

Finger nail polish remover is mostly acetone. Not really up to modern paints. I would try lacquer thinner next. If that doesn't work then methylene chloride. The latter stripped modern Lionel paint when lacquer thinner didn't. Obviously the parts you don't want damaged like windows and chrome bumpers/mirrors have to be removed first.

Pete

there is no need for blasting unless there are copious amounts of paint on a particular piece......this has been discussed in another thread about repainting locomotive bodies I believe. scuff original finish with grey scotchbrite , blend out any painted on artwork with fine sandpaper, 600 grit or finer, apply primer, scuff the primer to  a uniform finish and paint away. grey scothbrite will not harm fine details....blasting small models like we all work with may lead to disastrous results if you never used such equipment. sometimes I don't even bother with primer if the piece I'm working on scuffs out nice and uniform. no better substrate than the factory finish to work on top of.  

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