Unfortunately, methylene chloride has (finally) been banned in the US for paint removal as of this year. MeCl is electrophilic enough that it can nuke polymers including thermal cure powders. The substitute is dimethyl carbonate, a convenient but slow acting compound that releases methanol on contact with the atmosphere and surfaces. Methanol is a weak paint stripper that only works on lacquers, and sucks on polymers.
If you can find methylene chloride, use it. I wish I would have known it was banned. I bought some, went home and used it, needed more, went back to the store two weeks later, and no more on the shelves anywhere in town. All replaced by safer alternatives that don't work nearly as well as the nasty chemical.
Some coatings are so tough that even under mechanical removal you can burn into the base metal in spots before making it through the coating on other spots. Blasting and wire brushing both exhibit this problem with hard/tough coatings, so be careful.
The new stuff is all junk.
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