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#1
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How to clean glue scrapers?
I have bought a bunch of scrapers at garage sales, so when they got too
cruddy to use I went to a clean one. Today I ran out of clean ones. How do I clean them up? Or, is there is clever way to stop them from getting cruddy? I have tried cleaning them with a paper towel after use, but it doesn't work too well. Maybe quickly putting them in a glass of water? I cleaned them this time with a propane torch and steel wool, but have a feeling that can't be the best way. thanks |
#2
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"toller" wrote in message ... I have bought a bunch of scrapers at garage sales, so when they got too cruddy to use I went to a clean one. Today I ran out of clean ones. How do I clean them up? Or, is there is clever way to stop them from getting cruddy? I have tried cleaning them with a paper towel after use, but it doesn't work too well. Maybe quickly putting them in a glass of water? I cleaned them this time with a propane torch and steel wool, but have a feeling that can't be the best way. thanks What kind of glue? PVA responds to vinegar. Polyu to acetone. Those throwaway Glad containers will work with vinegar, might with acetone. Check and see. Imagine that torch may have annealed your edge. |
#3
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toller wrote:
.... ...is there is clever way to stop them from getting cruddy? ... Wait until the glue isn't so sticky is the surest way. Sounds to me like you're scraping too soon (and cutting down the amount of glue so you don't have excessive squeeze out might be another thing to watch--there's really no need for much at all--all that ends up on the surface is just wasted material and extra effort). |
#4
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"George" george@least wrote in message ... "toller" wrote in message ... I have bought a bunch of scrapers at garage sales, so when they got too cruddy to use I went to a clean one. Today I ran out of clean ones. How do I clean them up? Or, is there is clever way to stop them from getting cruddy? I have tried cleaning them with a paper towel after use, but it doesn't work too well. Maybe quickly putting them in a glass of water? I cleaned them this time with a propane torch and steel wool, but have a feeling that can't be the best way. thanks What kind of glue? PVA responds to vinegar. Polyu to acetone. Those throwaway Glad containers will work with vinegar, might with acetone. Check and see. PVA. Will try it today. Imagine that torch may have annealed your edge. Yeh, I thought of that while I was doing it; but they never got hot enough to color and I cooled them right afterwards in water. I'll hope for the best. |
#5
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toller wrote:
I have bought a bunch of scrapers at garage sales, so when they got too cruddy to use I went to a clean one. Today I ran out of clean ones. How do I clean them up? Or, is there is clever way to stop them from getting cruddy? Don't scrape until the glue is dry. -- dadiOH ____________________________ dadiOH's dandies v3.06... ....a help file of info about MP3s, recording from LP/cassette and tips & tricks on this and that. Get it at http://mysite.verizon.net/xico |
#6
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toller wrote:
I have bought a bunch of scrapers at garage sales, so when they got too cruddy to use I went to a clean one. Today I ran out of clean ones. How do I clean them up? Or, is there is clever way to stop them from getting cruddy? Some things to consider: 1) Don't apply so much glue. 2) Wait till the glue is at least cured into the "green" state before trying to remove. 3) Use a 1,500 watt heat gun and an 8" dia wire wheel on your bench grinder to clean scraper blades. BTDT, have T-Shirt HTH Lew |
#7
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toller said snip How do I clean them up? Or, is there is clever way to stop them from getting cruddy? I have tried cleaning them with a paper towel after use, but it doesn't work too well. Maybe quickly putting them in a glass of water? As others have stated, wait until the glue dries a little more. I've been a fan of protecting the wood with blue painters tape. It really makes clean-up faster. To clean really old, rusty or glue covered scrapers: use double stick tape to attach the scraper to a large scrap that's clamped securely to your bench, get a piece of hardboard and attach some stick-on sandpaper, get your trusty PC 505 and double stick it to the hardboard, sand clean to 220, tune, sharpen and burnish. Note: If a PC 505 is not on the shelf, most any ROS will work. Dave Posted Via Usenet.com Premium Usenet Newsgroup Services ---------------------------------------------------------- ** SPEED ** RETENTION ** COMPLETION ** ANONYMITY ** ---------------------------------------------------------- http://www.usenet.com |
#8
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on 4/5/2005 3:43 PM Teamcasa said the following:
toller said As others have stated, wait until the glue dries a little more. I've been a fan of protecting the wood with blue painters tape. It really makes clean-up faster. As others have said, use a bit less glue. Some squeeze-out is, I guess, inevitable. I long ago read a tip somewhere that it's best - particularly when you're not going to paint the wood - to let the glue dry completely and THEN pare it off with an appropriately sharpened chisel and finish with a steel finishing scraper. If you're doing right there won't be anything to remove from either the chisel or the scraper and if you keep your mitts of the glue line until it sets up as above you won't drive the glue into the wood where it will affect the finish or require you to sand it down to remove it. |
#9
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toller wrote: I have bought a bunch of scrapers at garage sales, so when they got too cruddy to use I went to a clean one. Today I ran out of clean ones. I like the "disposable" plastic putty knives. Pretty much nothing stick to them, one dry you can just flex them and the gunk pops off. If you are careless about cleaning your putty knives while the gunk is still wet, the "dispioable" ones last longer than the steel ones. -- FF |
#10
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wrote in message oups.com... toller wrote: I have bought a bunch of scrapers at garage sales, so when they got too cruddy to use I went to a clean one. Today I ran out of clean ones. I like the "disposable" plastic putty knives. Pretty much nothing stick to them, one dry you can just flex them and the gunk pops off. If you are careless about cleaning your putty knives while the gunk is still wet, the "dispioable" ones last longer than the steel ones. -- FF I use credit cards that come with my name but there not real cards, just them hoping I sign up but they are really good for this useage and if one gets gunky, trash it. Your out nothing! Rich |
#11
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Rich wrote:
wrote in message oups.com... toller wrote: I have bought a bunch of scrapers at garage sales, so when they got too cruddy to use I went to a clean one. Today I ran out of clean ones. I like the "disposable" plastic putty knives. Pretty much nothing stick to them, one dry you can just flex them and the gunk pops off. If you are careless about cleaning your putty knives while the gunk is still wet, the "dispioable" ones last longer than the steel ones. -- FF I use credit cards that come with my name but there not real cards, just them hoping I sign up but they are really good for this useage and if one gets gunky, trash it. Your out nothing! Me too, I have a nice thick one that entitled me to meals at U of Washington, Seattle at a conference. Another one was a business card from a garage that used to service our car. They work best when the glue is rubbery but not fully set. They knock any drips off my waxed bench top really well too, no scratches. Peter -- Add my middle initial to email me. It has become attached to a country |
#12
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Peter Ashby wrote:
Rich wrote: wrote in message oups.com... toller wrote: I have bought a bunch of scrapers at garage sales, so when they got too cruddy to use I went to a clean one. Today I ran out of clean ones. I like the "disposable" plastic putty knives. Pretty much nothing stick to them, one dry you can just flex them and the gunk pops off. If you are careless about cleaning your putty knives while the gunk is still wet, the "dispioable" ones last longer than the steel ones. -- FF I use credit cards that come with my name but there not real cards, just them hoping I sign up but they are really good for this useage and if one gets gunky, trash it. Your out nothing! Me too, I have a nice thick one that entitled me to meals at U of Washington, Seattle at a conference. Another one was a business card from a garage that used to service our car. They work best when the glue is rubbery but not fully set. They knock any drips off my waxed bench top really well too, no scratches. I just had a notion--anybody ever try to cut an AOL CD into a few glue scrapers? Peter -- --John to email, dial "usenet" and validate (was jclarke at eye bee em dot net) |
#13
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J. Clarke wrote:
Peter Ashby wrote: Rich wrote: wrote in message oups.com... toller wrote: I have bought a bunch of scrapers at garage sales, so when they got too cruddy to use I went to a clean one. Today I ran out of clean ones. I like the "disposable" plastic putty knives. Pretty much nothing stick to them, one dry you can just flex them and the gunk pops off. If you are careless about cleaning your putty knives while the gunk is still wet, the "dispioable" ones last longer than the steel ones. -- FF I use credit cards that come with my name but there not real cards, just them hoping I sign up but they are really good for this useage and if one gets gunky, trash it. Your out nothing! Me too, I have a nice thick one that entitled me to meals at U of Washington, Seattle at a conference. Another one was a business card from a garage that used to service our car. They work best when the glue is rubbery but not fully set. They knock any drips off my waxed bench top really well too, no scratches. I just had a notion--anybody ever try to cut an AOL CD into a few glue scrapers? You mean actually open the shrinkwrap before throwing it away? Eeuugh! Peter -- Add my middle initial to email me. It has become attached to a country |
#14
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If it's indoor-only glue, soak them in hot water. For waterproof glue
gunk, I would replace the blade (or sell them at a garage sale). On Tue, 05 Apr 2005 15:04:06 GMT, "toller" wrote: I have bought a bunch of scrapers at garage sales, so when they got too cruddy to use I went to a clean one. Today I ran out of clean ones. How do I clean them up? Or, is there is clever way to stop them from getting cruddy? I have tried cleaning them with a paper towel after use, but it doesn't work too well. Maybe quickly putting them in a glass of water? I cleaned them this time with a propane torch and steel wool, but have a feeling that can't be the best way. thanks |
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