Luis,
I don't have any experience with the kit you are using, so unfortunately I cannot be of any real help with regard to the kit or the tooling it may/may not require
Personally, I'd do the mass clean-up using the finest you can, then go back and touch up smaller areas with the coarser grades, but that's just me
Ryan,
From all accounts I've seen, Chemcast is not as good as once thought. Even most the mfrs who were using it have stopped and gone back to Cyro or Polycast due to too many joint failures. It needed a few yrs on the market to prove itself one way or another and unfortunately, something is wrong with their process or QC or something. I've seen quite a few joint failures with this material and based on this, I simply could not recommend it for aquaria or any other pressure vessel. In most cases, the tank is fine for a period of time (6 months to a yr) and then "pop"; catastropic joint failure. Hopefully your experiences will differ. I'd hope that if 1 in every 50 tanks has a joint failure - yours will be one of the 49 that don't
(FWIW I don't know that it's 1 in 50, I just picked a random number)
That said, I don't think it's one of the worst (there are a few that are far worse) but I'm particularly leary of anything not made by the "big 3" when it comes to aquaria.
James
I don't have any experience with the kit you are using, so unfortunately I cannot be of any real help with regard to the kit or the tooling it may/may not require

Personally, I'd do the mass clean-up using the finest you can, then go back and touch up smaller areas with the coarser grades, but that's just me

Ryan,
From all accounts I've seen, Chemcast is not as good as once thought. Even most the mfrs who were using it have stopped and gone back to Cyro or Polycast due to too many joint failures. It needed a few yrs on the market to prove itself one way or another and unfortunately, something is wrong with their process or QC or something. I've seen quite a few joint failures with this material and based on this, I simply could not recommend it for aquaria or any other pressure vessel. In most cases, the tank is fine for a period of time (6 months to a yr) and then "pop"; catastropic joint failure. Hopefully your experiences will differ. I'd hope that if 1 in every 50 tanks has a joint failure - yours will be one of the 49 that don't

That said, I don't think it's one of the worst (there are a few that are far worse) but I'm particularly leary of anything not made by the "big 3" when it comes to aquaria.
James