removing transparency coating
On Sep 19, 6:03*pm, Brad wrote:
On Sep 19, 7:30*am, bumper wrote:
On Sep 19, 6:08*am, JJ Sinclair wrote:
On Sep 19, 5:33*am, jcarlyle wrote:
In that case, would one of those steamer thingies that they use to
remove wallpaper be useful?
-John
On Sep 19, 8:27 am, JJ Sinclair wrote:
Yeah, really hot water, boiling water won't hurt plexy and may loosen
the stuff some. Scraping with wood will leave a rub mark, but this can
be removed with canopy cleaner/scratch remover. I once removed the
stuff after 20 years...........Ugh!
JJ- Hide quoted text -
- Show quoted text -
Worth a try, plexy doesn't yield until it reaches about 350F- Hide quoted text -
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This is from one manufacturer of acrylic plastic (Plexiglas is a brand
name). Note the softening and melting temps are lower than some have
suggested in this thread - - so don't heat it and then lean on it (g).
"Thermal
Maximum Recommended Continuous Service
Temperature
°F 170-190
Softening Temperature °F 210-220
Melting Temperature °F 300-315"
I would do as JJ suggests, use boiling water. But use caution about
getting "creative" while applying heat,
My experience is the longer some such protective coatings are aged,
even when not directly exposed to UV, the harder they are to remove -
- UV makes is worse still!. So it's probably better to get on it
sooner rather than later. If the coating is left on because the canopy
is part of a building project, one might consider removing the coating
and then using clear plastic sheet to drape the canopy.
On a smaller scale, some of the tapes used to attach yaw strings can
be hell to remove later after prolonged UV exposure - - - especially
clear tapes. Ease of removal, leaving no residue even after years of
exposure, is one of the benefits of my MKIV yaw string.
bumper
zz
Minden
Ok......................I am going to try putting a vaporizer under
the canopy assy and let it steam for a couple of hours this AM. Will
also try some of the other suggestions, and one from a friend who
say's if it's "spray-lat" use a rag with isopropyl alcohol.
Brad
Brad
hi from rainy France.
I sometimes have lenses made and sometimes the process involves glue
of some kind that I used to remove with smelly toxic stuff, then one
day I left some in water for a few days and was suprised to find the
stuff fell off after a day in water.
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