Removing duct tape residue.

TeoZ teoz at neo.rr.com
Sun May 18 02:17:25 CDT 2003


How many people keep something as nasty as MEK in their house?
Generally if your trying to disolve something then pick a solvent in the
same family as the ink is made out of. like disolves like is a general rule.



----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Peter Turnbull" <pete at dunnington.u-net.com>
To: <cctalk at classiccmp.org>
Sent: Friday, May 16, 2003 1:49 PM
Subject: Re: Removing duct tape residue.


> On May 16,  3:55, vance at neurotica.com wrote:
> > I usually see isopropanol rather than methanol at the pharmacist.
>
> It may depend on the pharmacy, and methanol is more likely to be in the
> back room than the front shelf.  IPA is sold as "rubbing alcohol" in
> the States, "methylated spirit" for a variety of purpose is commonly
> available in the UK and most of Europe -- it's a mixture of ethanol and
> methanol (plus dye).  The point, however, is that methanol is a better
> solvent for felt-tip and ballpoint pen inks than isopropanol is, and
> that's what the original reference was about, IIRC.
>
> For glue residue (incl. duct tape), though, what we call "white spirit"
> or "turpentine substitute" (not to be confused with cellulose paint
> thinner) in the UK, is better than any of the common alcohols.
>
> None of the above will have any effect on most plastics, unlike
> toluene, MEK, acetone, ..., all of which are solvents for many plastics
> (in fact, for most non-waxy plastics, which leaves little but polythene
> and PTFE).
>
> -- 
> Pete Peter Turnbull
> Network Manager
> University of York



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