Carpet Tape
I used two-sided carpet tape to hold a small, fire-proof rug in front of the wood stove in the living room. When I removed the rug the other day, most of the tape came up easily but some is firmly attached to the wall-to-wall carpet below. Any ideas on how to loosen the tape for removal without damaging the carpet? Maybe just soap and water?
Paul |
Carpet Tape
Pavel314 wrote:
I used two-sided carpet tape to hold a small, fire-proof rug in front of the wood stove in the living room. When I removed the rug the other day, most of the tape came up easily but some is firmly attached to the wall-to-wall carpet below. Any ideas on how to loosen the tape for removal without damaging the carpet? Maybe just soap and water? Paul Have you tried goo-gone or goof-off ? The problem is that anything that softens the adhesive may leave you with a sticky residue on the carpet . Maybe you can try chilling it with ice and cracking it off ? -- Snag |
Carpet Tape
Naptha from your local hardware store
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Carpet Tape
On Wed, 23 Mar 2016 07:17:26 -0500, "Terry Coombs"
wrote: Pavel314 wrote: I used two-sided carpet tape to hold a small, fire-proof rug in front of the wood stove in the living room. When I removed the rug the other day, most of the tape came up easily but some is firmly attached to the wall-to-wall carpet below. Any ideas on how to loosen the tape for removal without damaging the carpet? Maybe just soap and water? Paul Have you tried goo-gone or goof-off ? The problem is that anything that softens the adhesive may leave you with a sticky residue on the carpet . Maybe you can try chilling it with ice and cracking it off ? Goop or Gojo hand cleaner, or similar...... Work it in well. It wont harm the carpeting, but you'll need to clean it off after with some soap and water. (I'd use the non-abrasive type). |
Carpet Tape
On Wed, 23 Mar 2016 07:17:26 -0500, "Terry Coombs"
wrote: Pavel314 wrote: I used two-sided carpet tape to hold a small, fire-proof rug in front of the wood stove in the living room. When I removed the rug the other day, most of the tape came up easily but some is firmly attached to the wall-to-wall carpet below. Any ideas on how to loosen the tape for removal without damaging the carpet? Maybe just soap and water? Paul Have you tried goo-gone or goof-off ? The problem is that anything that softens the adhesive may leave you with a sticky residue on the carpet . Maybe you can try chilling it with ice and cracking it off ? I'd think about dry ice (faster freeze) or a steam vac rented locally? |
Carpet Tape
On 3/23/16 7:50 AM, Pavel314 wrote:
I used two-sided carpet tape to hold a small, fire-proof rug in front of the wood stove in the living room. When I removed the rug the other day, most of the tape came up easily but some is firmly attached to the wall-to-wall carpet below. Any ideas on how to loosen the tape for removal without damaging the carpet? Maybe just soap and water? Paul Besides your wife, who cares if there's little goo on the BOTTOM of a carpet;-) -- If a man speaks in the woods and there is no woman around to hear him, is he still wrong? |
Carpet Tape
"Terry Coombs" wrote in message
... Pavel314 wrote: I used two-sided carpet tape to hold a small, fire-proof rug in front of the wood stove in the living room. When I removed the rug the other day, most of the tape came up easily but some is firmly attached to the wall-to-wall carpet below. Any ideas on how to loosen the tape for removal without damaging the carpet? Maybe just soap and water? Paul Have you tried goo-gone or goof-off ? The problem is that anything that softens the adhesive may leave you with a sticky residue on the carpet . Maybe you can try chilling it with ice and cracking it off ? Or, just apply single-sided tape over the residue of the old double-sided tape. |
Carpet Tape
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Carpet Tape
On Wed, 23 Mar 2016 21:32:49 -0400, "TomR"
wrote: "Terry Coombs" wrote in message ... Pavel314 wrote: I used two-sided carpet tape to hold a small, fire-proof rug in front of the wood stove in the living room. When I removed the rug the other day, most of the tape came up easily but some is firmly attached to the wall-to-wall carpet below. Any ideas on how to loosen the tape for removal without damaging the carpet? Maybe just soap and water? Paul Have you tried goo-gone or goof-off ? The problem is that anything that softens the adhesive may leave you with a sticky residue on the carpet . Maybe you can try chilling it with ice and cracking it off ? Or, just apply single-sided tape over the residue of the old double-sided tape. Why even "tape" down a "small" rug down in the first place, for cripes sake? |
Carpet Tape
On Wednesday, March 23, 2016 at 11:45:56 PM UTC-4, Oren wrote:
On Wed, 23 Mar 2016 21:32:49 -0400, "TomR" wrote: "Terry Coombs" wrote in message ... Pavel314 wrote: I used two-sided carpet tape to hold a small, fire-proof rug in front of the wood stove in the living room. When I removed the rug the other day, most of the tape came up easily but some is firmly attached to the wall-to-wall carpet below. Any ideas on how to loosen the tape for removal without damaging the carpet? Maybe just soap and water? Paul Have you tried goo-gone or goof-off ? The problem is that anything that softens the adhesive may leave you with a sticky residue on the carpet . Maybe you can try chilling it with ice and cracking it off ? Or, just apply single-sided tape over the residue of the old double-sided tape. Why even "tape" down a "small" rug down in the first place, for cripes sake? I'll take a shot at that one... Because rugs that are on top of rugs "walk" every time you step on them. Since it was fireproof rug in front of fireplace, he wanted to ensure that it stayed in place without constant manual repositioning. |
Carpet Tape
Pavel314 wrote:
I used two-sided carpet tape to hold a small, fire-proof rug in front of the wood stove in the living room. When I removed the rug the other day, most of the tape came up easily but some is firmly attached to the wall-to-wall carpet below. Any ideas on how to loosen the tape for removal without damaging the carpet? Maybe just soap and water? More tape. Use the stickiest tape you can find to repeatedly dab at the remaining tape goo. It should pick up a little at a time. This works for me on hard surfaces. It might work on carpet. Patience is required. |
Carpet Tape
On Wednesday, March 23, 2016 at 7:50:56 AM UTC-4, Pavel314 wrote:
I used two-sided carpet tape to hold a small, fire-proof rug in front of the wood stove in the living room. When I removed the rug the other day, most of the tape came up easily but some is firmly attached to the wall-to-wall carpet below. Any ideas on how to loosen the tape for removal without damaging the carpet? Maybe just soap and water? Paul When I gotten Christmas Tree sap or other sticky stuff on a carpet, I've used Goo-Gone and a fork. After letting the Goo-Gone work for a little while, you can *gently* use the fork (or any other pointy tool) to separate the carpet strains so that the Goo-Gone can work its way all around the fibers. A fork also works to lift the strains that get crushed by furniture. |
Carpet Tape
Oren posted for all of us...
On Wed, 23 Mar 2016 15:33:01 -0500, wrote: Goop or Gojo hand cleaner, or similar...... Work it in well. It wont harm the carpeting, but you'll need to clean it off after with some soap and water. (I'd use the non-abrasive type). Experience with your goats. Eh? The tongue tickles and then she moans and the relatives come and watch. -- Tekkie |
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