DIYbanter

DIYbanter (https://www.diybanter.com/)
-   UK diy (https://www.diybanter.com/uk-diy/)
-   -   Ski wax solvent (https://www.diybanter.com/uk-diy/138222-ski-wax-solvent.html)

Big Ron January 2nd 06 11:22 AM

Ski wax solvent
 
anybody know what will dissolve a hard ski wax - and then obviously
evaporate away leaving the wax when applied?

Ron



Stuart January 2nd 06 12:27 PM

Ski wax solvent
 
On Mon, 2 Jan 2006 11:22:13 -0000, "Big Ron"
wrote:

anybody know what will dissolve a hard ski wax - and then obviously
evaporate away leaving the wax when applied?

Ron


Not sure if this will do for waht you want .Do you mean to soften wax
so you can apply it .?? Why is it hard ...??
http://www.primera-bournemouth.co.uk...ories&I D=417





Shift THELEVER to reply.

Big Ron January 2nd 06 01:09 PM

Ski wax solvent
 
Thanks Stuart;
You get different grades of wax for differing snow conditions - hard wax for
dry new powder snow etc.
I just want to eliminate the messing about with a hot iron to apply the wax
that's all...

Ron
"Stuart" wrote in message
...
On Mon, 2 Jan 2006 11:22:13 -0000, "Big Ron"
wrote:

anybody know what will dissolve a hard ski wax - and then obviously
evaporate away leaving the wax when applied?

Ron


Not sure if this will do for waht you want .Do you mean to soften wax
so you can apply it .?? Why is it hard ...??
http://www.primera-bournemouth.co.uk...ories&I D=417





Shift THELEVER to reply.




Stuart January 2nd 06 01:23 PM

Ski wax solvent
 
On Mon, 2 Jan 2006 13:09:20 -0000, "Big Ron"
wrote:

Thanks Stuart;
You get different grades of wax for differing snow conditions - hard wax for
dry new powder snow etc.
I just want to eliminate the messing about with a hot iron to apply the wax
that's all...


Can't you get spray on wax .??

Stuart





Shift THELEVER to reply.

Douglas de Lacey January 2nd 06 02:43 PM

Ski wax solvent
 
Big Ron wrote:
Thanks Stuart;
You get different grades of wax for differing snow conditions - hard wax for
dry new powder snow etc.
I just want to eliminate the messing about with a hot iron to apply the wax
that's all...


But, but -- that's part of the mystique! If you don't want the bother,
then why not buy waxless ski? (The iron does not only soften the wax, it
encourages flow into the material of the ski; I doubt any solvent would
do as well. )

Douglas de Lacey.

raden January 2nd 06 03:07 PM

Ski wax solvent
 
In message , Big Ron
writes
Thanks Stuart;
You get different grades of wax for differing snow conditions - hard wax for
dry new powder snow etc.
I just want to eliminate the messing about with a hot iron to apply the wax
that's all...

Unless you're something of a seriously serious skier, AFAIK, wax is wax

--
geoff

Stuart Noble January 2nd 06 03:32 PM

Ski wax solvent
 
raden wrote:
In message , Big Ron
writes

Thanks Stuart;
You get different grades of wax for differing snow conditions - hard
wax for
dry new powder snow etc.
I just want to eliminate the messing about with a hot iron to apply
the wax
that's all...

Unless you're something of a seriously serious skier, AFAIK, wax is wax


Only in the sense that oil is oil.
Carnauba wax is super slippery, and beeswax pretty tacky, although, at
those temperatures, it would be a good deal harder.
Is the wax for protection of the skis or to make them go faster?
Cellulose thinners will dissolve any wax and, if you don't wipe it off,
will simply re-distribute it.

raden January 2nd 06 03:58 PM

Ski wax solvent
 
In message , Stuart Noble
writes
raden wrote:
In message , Big Ron
writes

Thanks Stuart;
You get different grades of wax for differing snow conditions - hard
wax for
dry new powder snow etc.
I just want to eliminate the messing about with a hot iron to apply
the wax
that's all...

Unless you're something of a seriously serious skier, AFAIK, wax is wax


Only in the sense that oil is oil.


Specifically with reference to skis here

Carnauba wax is super slippery, and beeswax pretty tacky, although, at
those temperatures, it would be a good deal harder.
Is the wax for protection of the skis or to make them go faster?


Wax fills in the gouges caused by stones, other skis, bodies etc

it also minimises friction, but you mainly ski on the metal blades more
on ice than powder snow, but for the average skier, as I said AFAIK, wax
is wax

unless you're a serious skier, it's just not important


Cellulose thinners will dissolve any wax and, if you don't wipe it off,
will simply re-distribute it.


--
geoff

Andy Dingley January 2nd 06 11:47 PM

Ski wax solvent
 
On Mon, 2 Jan 2006 13:09:20 -0000, "Big Ron"
wrote:

I just want to eliminate the messing about with a hot iron to apply the wax


You need the hot application, else you get a very short wax lifetime.
Rub-on waxes are OK for refilling over lunch, but they don't last
anything like as well as a hot waxing.

If you're looking for wax solvents for ski waxes, then anything will do
it - white spirit is probably simplest (google for techniques in making
it - I've got my own pages up on doing it for furniture polishes). Even
easier though is to just buy a soft paste wax, such as a bulk floor wax.
I wouldn't do this on snow, but it's pretty important for dry slopes.


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 11:53 AM.

Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004 - 2014 DIYbanter