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Bob[_44_] April 13th 14 04:21 PM

Suction Cups Holding ?
 
Hello,

Have a bird feeder that is held against the glass window via the typical
soft plastic suction cups.

They hod, but only for a relatively short time; perhaps a day or two.

What is the secret to getting them to hold on longer ?

Moisten first ?

Light oil ?

Or,...?

Is there any kind, brand, or style, that perhaps works better, that I
can replace with ?

Thanks,
Bob

---
This email is free from viruses and malware because avast! Antivirus protection is active.
http://www.avast.com


philo [_2_] April 13th 14 04:44 PM

Suction Cups Holding ?
 
On 04/13/2014 10:21 AM, Bob wrote:
Hello,

Have a bird feeder that is held against the glass window via the typical
soft plastic suction cups.

They hod, but only for a relatively short time; perhaps a day or two.

What is the secret to getting them to hold on longer ?

Moisten first ?

Light oil ?

Or,...?

Is there any kind, brand, or style, that perhaps works better, that I
can replace with ?

Thanks,
Bob




Yes, try moistening them

if that does not work, use a little clear RTV






micky April 13th 14 05:13 PM

Suction Cups Holding ?
 
On Sun, 13 Apr 2014 11:21:48 -0400, Bob wrote:

Hello,

Have a bird feeder that is held against the glass window via the typical
soft plastic suction cups.

They hod, but only for a relatively short time; perhaps a day or two.

What is the secret to getting them to hold on longer ?

Moisten first ?


Definitely.

Light oil ?


Water. I'm not sure if that dries out or not. Try it for a couple
years and let us know.

Or,...?

Is there any kind, brand, or style, that perhaps works better, that I
can replace with ?


Yes, they're called Watercups, and they're just like the one you have,
but they come packed in water.

Thanks,
Bob


Just kidding.

nestork April 13th 14 06:02 PM

Moistening the suction cups will help them keep the suction by filling the microscopically small roughness in the rubber cup. However, water evaporates and once it does, you're back to square one. I would use a very light oil like WD40 on the rubber cups and/or glass before applying the suction cups. The oil will fill the roughness just like moisture, but it won't evaporate.

Ed Pawlowski April 13th 14 06:22 PM

Suction Cups Holding ?
 
On 4/13/2014 11:21 AM, Bob wrote:
Hello,

Have a bird feeder that is held against the glass window via the typical
soft plastic suction cups.

They hod, but only for a relatively short time; perhaps a day or two.

What is the secret to getting them to hold on longer ?

Moisten first ?

Light oil ?

Or,...?

Is there any kind, brand, or style, that perhaps works better, that I
can replace with ?

Thanks,
Bob


Wet them and be sure the window is perfectly clean.
None are perfect, but bigger and thicker is better You may get a couple
of weeks, but I've never seen a suction cup last forever.


RobertMacy April 13th 14 06:35 PM

Suction Cups Holding ?
 
On Sun, 13 Apr 2014 10:02:11 -0700, nestork
wrote:


Moistening the suction cups will help them keep the suction by filling
the microscopically small roughness in the rubber cup. However, water
evaporates and once it does, you're back to square one. I would use a
very light oil like WD40 on the rubber cups and/or glass before applying
the suction cups. The oil will fill the roughness just like moisture,
but it won't evaporate.


Won't the WD40 deteriorate the plastic cup, at least whether it will or
not is unknown.

Will mineral oil, olive oil, or such work?

[email protected] April 13th 14 08:38 PM

Suction Cups Holding ?
 
On Sun, 13 Apr 2014 11:21:48 -0400, Bob wrote:

Hello,

Have a bird feeder that is held against the glass window via the typical
soft plastic suction cups.

They hod, but only for a relatively short time; perhaps a day or two.

What is the secret to getting them to hold on longer ?

Moisten first ?

Light oil ?

Or,...?

Is there any kind, brand, or style, that perhaps works better, that I
can replace with ?

Thanks,
Bob

---
This email is free from viruses and malware because avast! Antivirus protection is active.
http://www.avast.com

I've found glycerine works pretty good. GlysoMed hand creme works too.
Some people use soap. Not enough of either to allow it to slide down
the window!!!

[email protected] April 13th 14 08:49 PM

Suction Cups Holding ?
 
On Sun, 13 Apr 2014 10:35:51 -0700, RobertMacy
wrote:

On Sun, 13 Apr 2014 10:02:11 -0700, nestork
wrote:


Moistening the suction cups will help them keep the suction by filling
the microscopically small roughness in the rubber cup. However, water
evaporates and once it does, you're back to square one. I would use a
very light oil like WD40 on the rubber cups and/or glass before applying
the suction cups. The oil will fill the roughness just like moisture,
but it won't evaporate.


Won't the WD40 deteriorate the plastic cup, at least whether it will or
not is unknown.

Will mineral oil, olive oil, or such work?

WD40 is a crap-shoot at best. It evaporates like water, and depending
what the cup is made of, can seriously degrade it in short order.

Glass shops use glycerin on their rubber installers cups, taxi and
pizza delivery companies used glycerine on the suction cups of the
rooftop signs. It works good for sticking things to bathroom tile,
things like towel bars etc. It used to be on the instructions of many
suction mounted devices to wet the cup with one drop of
glycerine,spread thinly across the surface.

And it washes right off after you remove the suction cup - unlike RTV.

Vic Smith April 13th 14 10:14 PM

Suction Cups Holding ?
 
On Sun, 13 Apr 2014 10:44:30 -0500, philoÂ* wrote:

On 04/13/2014 10:21 AM, Bob wrote:
Hello,

Have a bird feeder that is held against the glass window via the typical
soft plastic suction cups.

They hod, but only for a relatively short time; perhaps a day or two.

What is the secret to getting them to hold on longer ?

Moisten first ?

Light oil ?

Or,...?

Is there any kind, brand, or style, that perhaps works better, that I
can replace with ?

Thanks,
Bob




Yes, try moistening them

if that does not work, use a little clear RTV


Like the RTV idea. Even if doesn't hold the vacuum seal, it should
act as an adhesive. Easily scraped off with a razor blade if it
fails.
WD40 is junk. Useless.
I've actually got a suction cup placed on a tile to hold my razor.
It's overdue to come off. Hasn't fallen off in more than year.
Only one I use. They're only for VERY light duty use.


Bob[_44_] April 13th 14 10:18 PM

From OP: Suction Cups Holding ? Where To Get The Glycerine(small amount of) ?
 
Hi,

Thanks all for the suggestions.

Will give Glycerine a try.

Any idea where to get/buy a very small amount ?

Bob
----------------------

On 4/13/2014 3:38 PM, wrote:
On Sun, 13 Apr 2014 11:21:48 -0400, Bob wrote:

Hello,

Have a bird feeder that is held against the glass window via the typical
soft plastic suction cups.

They hod, but only for a relatively short time; perhaps a day or two.

What is the secret to getting them to hold on longer ?

Moisten first ?

Light oil ?

Or,...?

Is there any kind, brand, or style, that perhaps works better, that I
can replace with ?

Thanks,
Bob

---
This email is free from viruses and malware because avast! Antivirus protection is active.
http://www.avast.com
I've found glycerine works pretty good. GlysoMed hand creme works too.
Some people use soap. Not enough of either to allow it to slide down
the window!!!



---
This email is free from viruses and malware because avast! Antivirus protection is active.
http://www.avast.com


[email protected] April 13th 14 10:58 PM

From OP: Suction Cups Holding ? Where To Get The Glycerine (small amount of) ?
 
On Sun, 13 Apr 2014 17:18:37 -0400, Bob wrote:

Hi,

Thanks all for the suggestions.

Will give Glycerine a try.

Any idea where to get/buy a very small amount ?

Bob



Your local pharmacy in the first aid aisle.
----------------------



Jon Danniken[_7_] April 13th 14 11:23 PM

Suction Cups Holding ?
 
On 04/13/2014 08:21 AM, Bob wrote:

This email is free from viruses and malware because avast! Antivirus
protection is active.
http://www.avast.com


Do you work for avast.com, or do you just like spamming for them?

Jon


nestork April 13th 14 11:28 PM

Good point. And, cooking oil is readily available in every home's kitchen.

nestork April 13th 14 11:35 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Bob[_44_] (Post 3222234)
Hi,

Thanks all for the suggestions.

Will give Glycerine a try.

Any idea where to get/buy a very small amount ?

Bob

I see a problem in using glycerine. It's an alcohol so it will evaporate just like water will, only much slower.

You can buy glycerine at any drug store. But, if you find the glycerine doesn't hold for very long, then try either cooking oil or some dish soap, neither of which will evaporate on you.

Stormin Mormon[_10_] April 14th 14 12:25 AM

Suction Cups Holding ?
 
On 4/13/2014 6:28 PM, nestork wrote:
Won't the WD40 deteriorate the plastic cup, at least whether it will or

not is unknown.

Will mineral oil, olive oil, or such work?


Good point. And, cooking oil is readily available in every home's
kitchen.


I've had cooking oil go rancid.

--
..
Christopher A. Young
Learn about Jesus
www.lds.org
..

gregz April 14th 14 03:43 AM

Suction Cups Holding ?
 
Bob wrote:
Hello,

Have a bird feeder that is held against the glass window via the typical
soft plastic suction cups.

They hod, but only for a relatively short time; perhaps a day or two.

What is the secret to getting them to hold on longer ?

Moisten first ?

Light oil ?

Or,...?

Is there any kind, brand, or style, that perhaps works better, that I can replace with ?

Thanks,
Bob


I hang a humming bird feeder full. Clean the glass with Windex spit on the
cups, rub around, stick. I think my cups are still on the window from last
year.

Greg

Norminn April 14th 14 11:21 AM

Suction Cups Holding ?
 
On 4/13/2014 11:21 AM, Bob wrote:
Hello,

Have a bird feeder that is held against the glass window via the typical
soft plastic suction cups.

They hod, but only for a relatively short time; perhaps a day or two.

What is the secret to getting them to hold on longer ?

Moisten first ?

Light oil ?

Or,...?

Is there any kind, brand, or style, that perhaps works better, that I
can replace with ?

Thanks,
Bob

---
This email is free from viruses and malware because avast! Antivirus
protection is active.
http://www.avast.com


Is it a sunny window? If so, heat might expand the cup and release it.
I'd try a larger suction cup for starters. If you use delicate
application, clear silicone caulk would do the job.....make a template
out of masking tape, stick it on and trim if needed.

Terry Coombs[_2_] April 14th 14 01:18 PM

Suction Cups Holding ?
 
Jon Danniken wrote:
On 04/13/2014 08:21 AM, Bob wrote:

This email is free from viruses and malware because avast! Antivirus
protection is active.
http://www.avast.com


Do you work for avast.com, or do you just like spamming for them?

Jon


That Avast! banner is removable , but they don't make it easy . I posted
instructions to turn it off somewhere , might not have been here though .
I'll post them here if anyone is interested ...
--
Snag



micky April 14th 14 02:54 PM

From OP: Suction Cups Holding ? Where To Get The Glycerine (small amount of) ?
 
On Sun, 13 Apr 2014 17:18:37 -0400, Bob wrote:

Hi,

Thanks all for the suggestions.

Will give Glycerine a try.

Any idea where to get/buy a very small amount ?


If you have a glycerin modem, you might even be able to get a free
sample online.

Or a solid-and-liquid modem. But they don't download as fast.

Bob
----------------------




On 4/13/2014 3:38 PM, wrote:
On Sun, 13 Apr 2014 11:21:48 -0400, Bob wrote:

Hello,

Have a bird feeder that is held against the glass window via the typical
soft plastic suction cups.

They hod, but only for a relatively short time; perhaps a day or two.

What is the secret to getting them to hold on longer ?

Moisten first ?

Light oil ?

Or,...?

Is there any kind, brand, or style, that perhaps works better, that I
can replace with ?

Thanks,
Bob

---
This email is free from viruses and malware because avast! Antivirus protection is active.
http://www.avast.com
I've found glycerine works pretty good. GlysoMed hand creme works too.
Some people use soap. Not enough of either to allow it to slide down
the window!!!



---
This email is free from viruses and malware because avast! Antivirus protection is active.
http://www.avast.com



micky April 14th 14 02:54 PM

Suction Cups Holding ?
 
On Mon, 14 Apr 2014 07:18:49 -0500, "Terry Coombs"
wrote:

Jon Danniken wrote:
On 04/13/2014 08:21 AM, Bob wrote:

This email is free from viruses and malware because avast! Antivirus
protection is active.
http://www.avast.com


Do you work for avast.com, or do you just like spamming for them?

Jon


That Avast! banner is removable , but they don't make it easy . I posted
instructions to turn it off somewhere , might not have been here though .
I'll post them here if anyone is interested ...


Of course it's not even an email.

Terry Coombs[_2_] April 14th 14 05:14 PM

Suction Cups Holding ?
 

"micky" wrote in message
...
On Mon, 14 Apr 2014 07:18:49 -0500, "Terry Coombs"
wrote:

Jon Danniken wrote:
On 04/13/2014 08:21 AM, Bob wrote:

This email is free from viruses and malware because avast! Antivirus
protection is active.
http://www.avast.com

Do you work for avast.com, or do you just like spamming for them?

Jon


That Avast! banner is removable , but they don't make it easy . I posted
instructions to turn it off somewhere , might not have been here though .
I'll post them here if anyone is interested ...


Of course it's not even an email.


Yeah , but Avast! appends that to every outgoing email or post . So do you
wanna know how to turn it off or not ?
--
Snag



BenignBodger April 14th 14 08:21 PM

Suction Cups Holding ?
 
On 4/13/2014 3:49 PM, wrote:
On Sun, 13 Apr 2014 10:35:51 -0700, RobertMacy
wrote:

On Sun, 13 Apr 2014 10:02:11 -0700, nestork
wrote:


Moistening the suction cups will help them keep the suction by filling
the microscopically small roughness in the rubber cup. However, water
evaporates and once it does, you're back to square one. I would use a
very light oil like WD40 on the rubber cups and/or glass before applying
the suction cups. The oil will fill the roughness just like moisture,
but it won't evaporate.


Won't the WD40 deteriorate the plastic cup, at least whether it will or
not is unknown.

Will mineral oil, olive oil, or such work?

WD40 is a crap-shoot at best. It evaporates like water, and depending
what the cup is made of, can seriously degrade it in short order.

Glass shops use glycerin on their rubber installers cups, taxi and
pizza delivery companies used glycerine on the suction cups of the
rooftop signs. It works good for sticking things to bathroom tile,
things like towel bars etc. It used to be on the instructions of many
suction mounted devices to wet the cup with one drop of
glycerine,spread thinly across the surface.

And it washes right off after you remove the suction cup - unlike RTV.

I like the glycerin idea. The suction cup which holds my Magellan GPS seems
to fall off about four times a year, usually when there is a sudden
temperature shift (it is sitting on the floor of the car right now). I'll
pick up a little bottle of glycerin the next time I go shopping and give it
a go.

[email protected] April 15th 14 03:57 AM

Suction Cups Holding ?
 
Almost anything that is oily-based and not water-based should help. Cooking oil olive oil, even some of the oily salad dressings if yu are desperate.

Ron April 16th 14 04:48 AM

Suction Cups Holding ?
 
On 4/13/2014 3:49 PM, wrote:
On Sun, 13 Apr 2014 10:35:51 -0700, RobertMacy
wrote:

On Sun, 13 Apr 2014 10:02:11 -0700, nestork
wrote:


Moistening the suction cups will help them keep the suction by filling
the microscopically small roughness in the rubber cup. However, water
evaporates and once it does, you're back to square one. I would use a
very light oil like WD40 on the rubber cups and/or glass before applying
the suction cups. The oil will fill the roughness just like moisture,
but it won't evaporate.


Won't the WD40 deteriorate the plastic cup, at least whether it will or
not is unknown.

Will mineral oil, olive oil, or such work?

WD40 is a crap-shoot at best. It evaporates like water, and depending
what the cup is made of, can seriously degrade it in short order.

Glass shops use glycerin on their rubber installers cups


Glass shops/glaziers could use it, but I was in the glass business for
25 years and I never saw a glazier use it. I never worked for a company
that even stocked it. Woods Power Grips last a LONG time w/o any
"conditioning" needed. The vacuum pump fails way before the rubber
surface does.

The plain old windshield suction cups sitting in my garage that are
about 15+ years old are almost as pliable as they were when they were
new, and they have only been cleaned with glass cleaner.


Digger Nick April 16th 14 12:35 PM

Suction Cups Holding ?
 
On Sunday, April 13, 2014 11:21:48 AM UTC-4, Bob wrote:
Hello,



Have a bird feeder that is held against the glass window via the typical

soft plastic suction cups.



They hod, but only for a relatively short time; perhaps a day or two.



What is the secret to getting them to hold on longer ?



Moisten first ?



Light oil ?



Or,...?



Is there any kind, brand, or style, that perhaps works better, that I

can replace with ?



Thanks,

Bob



---

This email is free from viruses and malware because avast! Antivirus protection is active.

http://www.avast.com


Rubbing alcohol to remove the oil. Wipe the rubber carefully. To much exposure can eat awy rubber

Digger Nick April 16th 14 12:37 PM

Suction Cups Holding ?
 
On Monday, April 14, 2014 10:57:59 PM UTC-4, wrote:
Almost anything that is oily-based and not water-based should help. Cooking oil olive oil, even some of the oily salad dressings if yu are desperate.


If that don't work use the opposite. Rubbing alcohol to clean the surface of finger grease.

gregz April 17th 14 07:42 AM

Suction Cups Holding ?
 
Digger Nick wrote:
On Monday, April 14, 2014 10:57:59 PM UTC-4, wrote:
Almost anything that is oily-based and not water-based should help.
Cooking oil olive oil, even some of the oily salad dressings if yu are desperate.


If that don't work use the opposite. Rubbing alcohol to clean the surface of finger grease.


Real rubbing alcohol has oil in it to keep skin from drying too much.

BenignBodger April 18th 14 05:29 PM

Suction Cups Holding ?
 
On 4/13/2014 3:49 PM, wrote:
On Sun, 13 Apr 2014 10:35:51 -0700, RobertMacy
wrote:

On Sun, 13 Apr 2014 10:02:11 -0700, nestork
wrote:


Moistening the suction cups will help them keep the suction by filling
the microscopically small roughness in the rubber cup. However, water
evaporates and once it does, you're back to square one. I would use a
very light oil like WD40 on the rubber cups and/or glass before applying
the suction cups. The oil will fill the roughness just like moisture,
but it won't evaporate.


Won't the WD40 deteriorate the plastic cup, at least whether it will or
not is unknown.

Will mineral oil, olive oil, or such work?

WD40 is a crap-shoot at best. It evaporates like water, and depending
what the cup is made of, can seriously degrade it in short order.

Glass shops use glycerin on their rubber installers cups, taxi and
pizza delivery companies used glycerine on the suction cups of the
rooftop signs. It works good for sticking things to bathroom tile,
things like towel bars etc. It used to be on the instructions of many
suction mounted devices to wet the cup with one drop of
glycerine,spread thinly across the surface.

And it washes right off after you remove the suction cup - unlike RTV.


I finally managed to find a small quantity of pure glycerin -- not an easy
thing since your normal CVS/Walgreens-type pharmacy don't sell such
old-style things any more. I've re-stuck my Magellan GPS's bracket back to
the windscreen and now we'll see how long the suck lasts. It takes a
vanishingly small quantity to do the job. I used too much the first time
and the bracket just slid down the glass like a crawling slug before I even
added the weight of the electronics. Of course it didn't pop off so that
may be a good sign.

Tekkie® April 19th 14 01:30 AM

Suction Cups Holding ?
 
nestork posted for all of us...

And I know how to SNIP


Moistening the suction cups will help them keep the suction by filling
the microscopically small roughness in the rubber cup. However, water
evaporates and once it does, you're back to square one. I would use a
very light oil like WD40 on the rubber cups and/or glass before applying
the suction cups. The oil will fill the roughness just like moisture,
but it won't evaporate.


NO NO NO WD 40! Use glycerin.

--
Tekkie

Tekkie® April 19th 14 01:33 AM

From OP: Suction Cups Holding ? Where To Get The Glycerine (small amount of) ?
 
micky posted for all of us...

And I know how to SNIP

If you have a glycerin modem, you might even be able to get a free
sample online.


Do you get any nitro with this?

--
Tekkie

Stormin Mormon[_10_] April 19th 14 01:41 AM

From OP: Suction Cups Holding ? Where To Get The Glycerine(small amount of) ?
 
On 4/18/2014 8:33 PM, Tekkie® wrote:
If you have a glycerin modem, you

might even be able to get a free
sample online.


Do you get any nitro with this?

You're all heart.

--
..
Christopher A. Young
Learn about Jesus
www.lds.org
..

Tekkie® April 19th 14 03:01 AM

From OP: Suction Cups Holding ? Where To Get The Glycerine (small amount of) ?
 
posted for all of us...

And I know how to SNIP


On Fri, 18 Apr 2014 20:33:28 -0400, Tekkie®
wrote:

micky posted for all of us...

And I know how to SNIP

If you have a glycerin modem, you might even be able to get a free
sample online.


Do you get any nitro with this?



Mix it with Nitric Acid and you have nitroglycerine


Me go BOOM! Can't even mix water without screwing it up.

--
Tekkie

[email protected] April 19th 14 01:40 PM

From OP: Suction Cups Holding ? Where To Get The Glycerine (small amount of) ?
 
On Fri, 18 Apr 2014 20:33:28 -0400, Tekkie®
wrote:

micky posted for all of us...

And I know how to SNIP

If you have a glycerin modem, you might even be able to get a free
sample online.


Do you get any nitro with this?



Mix it with Nitric Acid and you have nitroglycerine


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