
On Apr 12, 2026, at 11:59 AM, 'John Hawrylak, Woodstown NJ' via RBW Owners Bunch <rbw-owne...@googlegroups.com> wrote:
Newbaum's used a VERY tenacious tape. I wrapped a Nitto B177 with it, removed it, let it sit for 5 years and it was a PITA to remove using 70% alcohol and rough nylon pad. The stuff left after removing the tape was very tacky and rubbing with a nylon pad & alcohol did not work. The nylon pad picked up some glue and got very tacky, I had to use Goo Gone, but did not had to worry about it affecting paint.
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update.the bar tape and twine and adhesive came off no problem.my new concern is the amber shellac may have stained the clear coat. is this possible?i can’t feel any change in the surface where the amber soaked through. (variation in the color of the gold paint is from my headlamp)anyone got a solve for this?
<image0.jpeg>On Apr 12, 2026, at 11:59 AM, 'John Hawrylak, Woodstown NJ' via RBW Owners Bunch <rbw-owne...@googlegroups.com> wrote:--Newbaum's used a VERY tenacious tape. I wrapped a Nitto B177 with it, removed it, let it sit for 5 years and it was a PITA to remove using 70% alcohol and rough nylon pad. The stuff left after removing the tape was very tacky and rubbing with a nylon pad & alcohol did not work. The nylon pad picked up some glue and got very tacky, I had to use Goo Gone, but did not had to worry about it affecting paint.Suggest applying the alcohol (a lot, saturate it ) with a brush, apply more while removing the tape. Put the frame in a stand and set the taped section horizontal to minimize alcohol run off and apply alcohol with brush as you remove the tape. Wear sone cheap gloves to protect your hand. put a container below to catch excess and reuse the excessJohn HawrylakWoodstown NJ--On Sunday, April 12, 2026 at 12:32:00 PM UTC-4 brenton...@gmail.com wrote:heya,i just bought a pre owned clem frame and there are some areas of the frame wrapped with cotton tape and shellac (top tube curve and chainstay). I'd like to start fresh on this build and i am afraid of messing with the paint during removal.anyone done this successfully? is it easy? risky?
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On Apr 12, 2026, at 1:38 PM, Mike Rossi <mwill...@gmail.com> wrote:
Definitely stained it. The same thing happened on my Susie, but in a much smaller and inconspicuous spot. Alcohol, ammonia, Goo Gone, mineral spirits,… nothing worked. I actually went through the clear a bit and started to “eat up” one of the chain stay decals, so I stopped and left it alone. Personally, I think it(on your bike) looks cool and would be tempted to recreate the effect on the whole length of that tube. It might be possible to wet sand the clear with 2000 grit to get rid of the stain and buff it back to a shine, but I’d be scared to try it as I wouldn’t be sure how much clear there is.
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On Apr 13, 2026, at 12:43 AM, Brent Eastman <brenton...@gmail.com> wrote:
BIG WARNING to other shellac users, based on this experience I would highly recommend only using clear shellac on anything painted
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On Apr 13, 2026, at 6:18 AM, Mike Rossi <mwill...@gmail.com> wrote:
Yeah, but not sure which one. I may have softened up the clear with one and went through with another. Basically, the French horn decal on the chain stay started to flake away in some spots, so I knew I was breaking through the clear. I’m going to guess mineral spirits coupled with too much elbow grease. It happened not long after I first got the frame and I was bummed. That feeling has long passed, now.