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UK diy (uk.d-i-y) For the discussion of all topics related to diy (do-it-yourself) in the UK. All levels of experience and proficency are welcome to join in to ask questions or offer solutions. |
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#1
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Posted to uk.d-i-y
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We have some Kef speakers (cast alloy construction) that had that silky
rubber coating. Needless to say this coating is a ghastly sticky mess. Were using acetone at present but wondering if theres a better solvent to remove this horrid stuff. Not too worried if it removes the underlying paint as some has come off already. Wondering about petrol but not the nicest stuff to work with... Tim -- Please don't feed the trolls |
#2
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Posted to uk.d-i-y
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On 06/03/2019 19:36, Tim+ wrote:
We have some Kef speakers (cast alloy construction) that had that silky rubber coating. Needless to say this coating is a ghastly sticky mess. Were using acetone at present but wondering if theres a better solvent to remove this horrid stuff. Not too worried if it removes the underlying paint as some has come off already. Wondering about petrol but not the nicest stuff to work with... Tim Toluene based thinner, or maybe this: https://www.toolstation.com/rustins-...hoCpycQAvD_BwE https://preview.tinyurl.com/y3tltb2z |
#3
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Posted to uk.d-i-y
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On 06/03/2019 19:36, Tim+ wrote:
We have some Kef speakers (cast alloy construction) that had that silky rubber coating. Needless to say this coating is a ghastly sticky mess. Were using acetone at present but wondering if theres a better solvent to remove this horrid stuff. Not too worried if it removes the underlying paint as some has come off already. Try brake fluid. It is a surprisingly good solvent for degraded tacky rubbery plastics. Wear suitably thick impervious gloves. -- Regards, Martin Brown |
#4
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In message , Richard
writes On 06/03/2019 19:36, Tim+ wrote: We have some Kef speakers (cast alloy construction) that had that silky rubber coating. Needless to say this coating is a ghastly sticky mess. Were using acetone at present but wondering if theres a better solvent to remove this horrid stuff. Not too worried if it removes the underlying paint as some has come off already. Wondering about petrol but not the nicest stuff to work with... Tim Toluene based thinner, or maybe this: https://www.toolstation.com/rustins-...40443?utm_sour ce=googleshopping&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=go ogleshoppingfeed&gclid= CjwKCAiA_P3jBRAqEiwAZyWWaJNwzx6W-SKvpsmKQXOwMCaSZaOx6jjOdKSfaD-8LoZIRWHf zHXr1hoCpycQAvD_BwE https://preview.tinyurl.com/y3tltb2z I'd be very interested if anyone has actually tried that, or found something else that does work. I keep finding more and more things that have this awful coating, some of them quite small and delicate, and I've not had much success in the past. -- Bill |
#5
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Martin Brown wrote:
On 06/03/2019 19:36, Tim+ wrote: We have some Kef speakers (cast alloy construction) that had that silky rubber coating. Needless to say this coating is a ghastly sticky mess. Were using acetone at present but wondering if theres a better solvent to remove this horrid stuff. Not too worried if it removes the underlying paint as some has come off already. Try brake fluid. It is a surprisingly good solvent for degraded tacky rubbery plastics. Wear suitably thick impervious gloves. Sounds interesting. Ill have a rummage in my garage... Tim -- Please don't feed the trolls |
#6
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Tim+ Wrote in message:
Martin Brown wrote: On 06/03/2019 19:36, Tim+ wrote: We have some Kef speakers (cast alloy construction) that had that silky rubber coating. Needless to say this coating is a ghastly sticky mess. We?re using acetone at present but wondering if there?s a better solvent to remove this horrid stuff. Not too worried if it removes the underlying paint as some has come off already. Try brake fluid. It is a surprisingly good solvent for degraded tacky rubbery plastics. Wear suitably thick impervious gloves. Sounds interesting. I?ll have a rummage in my garage... Tim For a respirator? -- Jim K ----Android NewsGroup Reader---- http://usenet.sinaapp.com/ |
#7
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On 6 Mar 2019 19:36:45 GMT, Tim+ wrote:
We have some Kef speakers (cast alloy construction) that had that silky rubber coating. Needless to say this coating is a ghastly sticky mess. We’re using acetone at present but wondering if there’s a better solvent to remove this horrid stuff. Not too worried if it removes the underlying paint as some has come off already. Wondering about petrol but not the nicest stuff to work with... I've removed this vile stuff from a few cameras and binoculars as well as plastic (computer mice) using White Spirit. Doesn't harm plastic and a microfibre cloth with copious amounts of white spirit and patience works well. |
#8
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On Wed, 06 Mar 2019 21:42:32 +0000
Peter Parry wrote: I've removed this vile stuff from a few cameras and binoculars as well as plastic (computer mice) using White Spirit. Doesn't harm plastic and a microfibre cloth with copious amounts of white spirit and patience works well. I've done that but it makes me feel that a better solvent would reduce the amount of scrubbing required. |
#9
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Posted to uk.d-i-y
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On 06/03/19 19:36, Tim+ wrote:
We have some Kef speakers (cast alloy construction) that had that silky rubber coating. Needless to say this coating is a ghastly sticky mess. Were using acetone at present but wondering if theres a better solvent to remove this horrid stuff. Not too worried if it removes the underlying paint as some has come off already. Wondering about petrol but not the nicest stuff to work with... This was discussed over in uk.tech.digital-tv very recently. One point raised was that no matter what solvent you use, the sticky goo will come through again in a matter of weeks/months. Is there any Fablon-like adhesive vinyl material which you could use to permanently cover the sticky surface and wouldn't look too bad? Loads on ebay, but I've no idea whether or not it is any good. -- Jeff |
#10
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Peter Parry wrote:
On 6 Mar 2019 19:36:45 GMT, Tim+ wrote: We have some Kef speakers (cast alloy construction) that had that silky rubber coating. Needless to say this coating is a ghastly sticky mess. WeÂ’re using acetone at present but wondering if thereÂ’s a better solvent to remove this horrid stuff. Not too worried if it removes the underlying paint as some has come off already. Wondering about petrol but not the nicest stuff to work with... I've removed this vile stuff from a few cameras and binoculars as well as plastic (computer mice) using White Spirit. Doesn't harm plastic and a microfibre cloth with copious amounts of white spirit and patience works well. We have 5 to do. Acetone does work but its very labour intensive. Hoping to find a better/quicker solvent. Tim -- Please don't feed the trolls |
#11
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Jeff Layman wrote:
On 06/03/19 19:36, Tim+ wrote: We have some Kef speakers (cast alloy construction) that had that silky rubber coating. Needless to say this coating is a ghastly sticky mess. Were using acetone at present but wondering if theres a better solvent to remove this horrid stuff. Not too worried if it removes the underlying paint as some has come off already. Wondering about petrol but not the nicest stuff to work with... This was discussed over in uk.tech.digital-tv very recently. One point raised was that no matter what solvent you use, the sticky goo will come through again in a matter of weeks/months. Not if you remove it all! Is there any Fablon-like adhesive vinyl material which you could use to permanently cover the sticky surface and wouldn't look too bad? Loads on ebay, but I've no idea whether or not it is any good. Fablon on Kef egg speakers? Hmm, no thanks. Tim -- Please don't feed the trolls |
#12
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On 06/03/2019 22:43, Jeff Layman wrote:
On 06/03/19 19:36, Tim+ wrote: We have some Kef speakers (cast alloy construction) that had that silky rubber coating.Â* Needless to say this coating is a ghastly sticky mess. Were using acetone at present but wondering if theres a better solvent to remove this horrid stuff. Not too worried if it removes the underlying paint as some has come off already. Wondering about petrol but not the nicest stuff to work with... This was discussed over in uk.tech.digital-tv very recently. One point raised was that no matter what solvent you use, the sticky goo will come through again in a matter of weeks/months. Is there any Fablon-like adhesive vinyl material which you could use to permanently cover the sticky surface and wouldn't look too bad? Loads on ebay, but I've no idea whether or not it is any good. Perhaps a flocking coat - usually applied as a base adhesive, then the flock fibres applied after. -- Cheers, John. /================================================== ===============\ | Internode Ltd - http://www.internode.co.uk | |-----------------------------------------------------------------| | John Rumm - john(at)internode(dot)co(dot)uk | \================================================= ================/ |
#13
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On 06/03/19 22:54, Tim+ wrote:
Jeff Layman wrote: On 06/03/19 19:36, Tim+ wrote: We have some Kef speakers (cast alloy construction) that had that silky rubber coating. Needless to say this coating is a ghastly sticky mess. Were using acetone at present but wondering if theres a better solvent to remove this horrid stuff. Not too worried if it removes the underlying paint as some has come off already. Wondering about petrol but not the nicest stuff to work with... This was discussed over in uk.tech.digital-tv very recently. One point raised was that no matter what solvent you use, the sticky goo will come through again in a matter of weeks/months. Not if you remove it all! OK. Drastic, but effective. I had assumed you were just trying to remove the sticky mess which leaches out of the rubber stuff rather than the whole coat. Is there any Fablon-like adhesive vinyl material which you could use to permanently cover the sticky surface and wouldn't look too bad? Loads on ebay, but I've no idea whether or not it is any good. Fablon on Kef egg speakers? Hmm, no thanks. Didn't realise they were egg-shaped. No, Fablon definitely won't do! -- Jeff |
#14
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There have been a lot of threads on this stuff in various groups recently
and I've not seen any consensus on what to do. If it is just a coating then it probably does have a solvent if you can identify what the paint is. I would however suggest that also you check up on the speaker units surrounds cones and suspension, as many speakers of a similar age seem to be almost write offs due to the plastic going hard, or falling to bits. Also be aware that if you create any dust from removal of the coating its going to be bad news for speakers. Brian -- ----- -- This newsgroup posting comes to you directly from... The Sofa of Brian Gaff... Blind user, so no pictures please Note this Signature is meaningless.! "Tim+" wrote in message ... We have some Kef speakers (cast alloy construction) that had that silky rubber coating. Needless to say this coating is a ghastly sticky mess. We're using acetone at present but wondering if there's a better solvent to remove this horrid stuff. Not too worried if it removes the underlying paint as some has come off already. Wondering about petrol but not the nicest stuff to work with... Tim -- Please don't feed the trolls |
#16
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On Wed, 6 Mar 2019 21:49:12 +0000, Rob Morley
wrote: On Wed, 06 Mar 2019 21:42:32 +0000 Peter Parry wrote: I've removed this vile stuff from a few cameras and binoculars as well as plastic (computer mice) using White Spirit. Doesn't harm plastic and a microfibre cloth with copious amounts of white spirit and patience works well. I've done that but it makes me feel that a better solvent would reduce the amount of scrubbing required. The problem is finding a solvent which doesn't dissolve everything else as well as the coating. The ones I tried were acetone (pretty useless on the rubber but turned many other plastics into goo). Isopropanol (little or no effect on the coating but safe on almost everything). Ethanol and Methanol - as for Isopropanol. Ether (quite effective but difficult to source and for use outdoors only. Methylene Chloride (removed the coating but also the various thermoplastic substrates and again, only use outdoors). White Spirit (removed the coating more easily than I had expected when used with microfibre cloth and pretty harmless to other plastics etc. ) Eventually I settled on the white spirit as being benign as far as user and various substrates were concerned but also quite effective at removing the goo after leaving it covered in a rag soaked in white spirit for half an hour and then attacking it with a microfibre cloth soaked in white spirit. The soft rubber coating certainly didn't come back afterwards. |
#17
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Peter Parry Wrote in message:
On Wed, 6 Mar 2019 21:49:12 +0000, Rob Morley wrote: On Wed, 06 Mar 2019 21:42:32 +0000 Peter Parry wrote: I've removed this vile stuff from a few cameras and binoculars as well as plastic (computer mice) using White Spirit. Doesn't harm plastic and a microfibre cloth with copious amounts of white spirit and patience works well. I've done that but it makes me feel that a better solvent would reduce the amount of scrubbing required. The problem is finding a solvent which doesn't dissolve everything else as well as the coating. The ones I tried were acetone (pretty useless on the rubber but turned many other plastics into goo). Isopropanol (little or no effect on the coating but safe on almost everything). Ethanol and Methanol - as for Isopropanol. Ether (quite effective but difficult to source and for use outdoors only. Methylene Chloride (removed the coating but also the various thermoplastic substrates and again, only use outdoors). White Spirit (removed the coating more easily than I had expected when used with microfibre cloth and pretty harmless to other plastics etc. ) Eventually I settled on the white spirit as being benign as far as user and various substrates were concerned but also quite effective at removing the goo after leaving it covered in a rag soaked in white spirit for half an hour and then attacking it with a microfibre cloth soaked in white spirit. The soft rubber coating certainly didn't come back afterwards. ave How long did you leave it? -- Jim K ----Android NewsGroup Reader---- http://usenet.sinaapp.com/ |
#18
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On Thu, 7 Mar 2019 11:34:46 +0000 (GMT+00:00), "Jim K.."
wrote: Peter Parry Wrote in message: On Wed, 6 Mar 2019 21:49:12 +0000, Rob Morley wrote: On Wed, 06 Mar 2019 21:42:32 +0000 Peter Parry wrote: I've removed this vile stuff from a few cameras and binoculars as well as plastic (computer mice) using White Spirit. Doesn't harm plastic and a microfibre cloth with copious amounts of white spirit and patience works well. I've done that but it makes me feel that a better solvent would reduce the amount of scrubbing required. The problem is finding a solvent which doesn't dissolve everything else as well as the coating. The ones I tried were acetone (pretty useless on the rubber but turned many other plastics into goo). Isopropanol (little or no effect on the coating but safe on almost everything). Ethanol and Methanol - as for Isopropanol. Ether (quite effective but difficult to source and for use outdoors only. Methylene Chloride (removed the coating but also the various thermoplastic substrates and again, only use outdoors). White Spirit (removed the coating more easily than I had expected when used with microfibre cloth and pretty harmless to other plastics etc. ) Eventually I settled on the white spirit as being benign as far as user and various substrates were concerned but also quite effective at removing the goo after leaving it covered in a rag soaked in white spirit for half an hour and then attacking it with a microfibre cloth soaked in white spirit. The soft rubber coating certainly didn't come back afterwards. ave How long did you leave it? Only about 30 mins as I recall. |
#19
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On Thu, 07 Mar 2019 10:40:33 +0000
Peter Parry wrote: The soft rubber coating certainly didn't come back afterwards. Indeed - fairly shiny plastic underneath, not as nice as the rubbery stuff when new but infinitely preferable once it had gone gooey. |
#20
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Peter Parry Wrote in message:
On Thu, 7 Mar 2019 11:34:46 +0000 (GMT+00:00), "Jim K.." wrote: Peter Parry Wrote in message: On Wed, 6 Mar 2019 21:49:12 +0000, Rob Morley wrote: On Wed, 06 Mar 2019 21:42:32 +0000 Peter Parry wrote: I've removed this vile stuff from a few cameras and binoculars as well as plastic (computer mice) using White Spirit. Doesn't harm plastic and a microfibre cloth with copious amounts of white spirit and patience works well. I've done that but it makes me feel that a better solvent would reduce the amount of scrubbing required. The problem is finding a solvent which doesn't dissolve everything else as well as the coating. The ones I tried were acetone (pretty useless on the rubber but turned many other plastics into goo). Isopropanol (little or no effect on the coating but safe on almost everything). Ethanol and Methanol - as for Isopropanol. Ether (quite effective but difficult to source and for use outdoors only. Methylene Chloride (removed the coating but also the various thermoplastic substrates and again, only use outdoors). White Spirit (removed the coating more easily than I had expected when used with microfibre cloth and pretty harmless to other plastics etc. ) Eventually I settled on the white spirit as being benign as far as user and various substrates were concerned but also quite effective at removing the goo after leaving it covered in a rag soaked in white spirit for half an hour and then attacking it with a microfibre cloth soaked in white spirit. The soft rubber coating certainly didn't come back afterwards. ave How long did you leave it? Only about 30 mins as I recall. I meant before you declared it a "success"... -- Jim K ----Android NewsGroup Reader---- http://usenet.sinaapp.com/ |
#21
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On Thu, 7 Mar 2019 21:05:11 +0000 (GMT+00:00), "Jim K.."
wrote: Peter Parry Wrote in message: On Thu, 7 Mar 2019 11:34:46 +0000 (GMT+00:00), "Jim K.." wrote: Peter Parry Wrote in message: On Wed, 6 Mar 2019 21:49:12 +0000, Rob Morley wrote: On Wed, 06 Mar 2019 21:42:32 +0000 Peter Parry wrote: I've removed this vile stuff from a few cameras and binoculars as well as plastic (computer mice) using White Spirit. Doesn't harm plastic and a microfibre cloth with copious amounts of white spirit and patience works well. I've done that but it makes me feel that a better solvent would reduce the amount of scrubbing required. The problem is finding a solvent which doesn't dissolve everything else as well as the coating. The ones I tried were acetone (pretty useless on the rubber but turned many other plastics into goo). Isopropanol (little or no effect on the coating but safe on almost everything). Ethanol and Methanol - as for Isopropanol. Ether (quite effective but difficult to source and for use outdoors only. Methylene Chloride (removed the coating but also the various thermoplastic substrates and again, only use outdoors). White Spirit (removed the coating more easily than I had expected when used with microfibre cloth and pretty harmless to other plastics etc. ) Eventually I settled on the white spirit as being benign as far as user and various substrates were concerned but also quite effective at removing the goo after leaving it covered in a rag soaked in white spirit for half an hour and then attacking it with a microfibre cloth soaked in white spirit. The soft rubber coating certainly didn't come back afterwards. ave How long did you leave it? Only about 30 mins as I recall. I meant before you declared it a "success"... Ah - several years, one pair of binoculars 10 years so far. |
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