Thanks in advance
Jerry
Try either denatured alcohol or rubbing alcohol. They will soften the
adhesive and will not harm the plexiglass.
--
Remve "_" from email to reply to me personally.
Kerosene
Do not use denatured alcohal to soak off paper from Plexiglas. I've had it
craze very badly from exposure to alchol. I had a Plexiglass cylinder that
some one filled with ethonal, and in a short time it fractured all over and
fell apart.
Oh, you poor sole! BTDT !!!
The only thing I have had any luck with, is getting a beer or three, putting
some music on, and getting ready to have lots of patience. If you have more
money than time, get a new piece.
Some very hot water and a big squirt of liquid dishwashing detergent may
help to loosen the bonds a little, but expect no miracles.
I have never tried cigarette lighter fluid on plexi. Does it mess with the
finish? That is always my solution to weaken old glue. Also "goof off"
glue remover may help, but I have never tried it on plexi. It is in the
painting section at hardware stores.
--
Jim in NC
--
Jim in NC
> Do not use denatured alcohal to soak off paper from Plexiglas. I've had it
> craze very badly from exposure to alchol. I had a Plexiglass cylinder that
> some one filled with ethonal, and in a short time it fractured all over
and
> fell apart.
Rubbing alcohol is methanol. Big difference from ethanol. That said, I
have no idea if methanol will harm plexi.
--
Jim in NC
Rubbing alcohol is methanol. Big difference from ethanol. That said,
I
have no idea if methanol will harm plexi.
++++++++++++++++++++++
Also "denatured" alcohol at the local hardware store can be denatured
with just about anything of which the BATF approves - like acetone,
toluene, and other solvents. Makes for some costly surprises if you
don't test first..........
====================
Leon McAtee
If you're really serious, try this stuff --> www.dsr5.com
It's designed for what you are doing.
Jerry in NC
"Morgans" <jsmo...@chJUarNKer.net> wrote in message
news:cSnnf.5188$Xx3....@fe03.lga...
It looks like one of the citrus based terpenes; d-Limonene or the
like.
Other stuff worth trying "Citra-Solve". Basically anything that says
it's flammable and smells like lemons.
I'll have to agree with those who advise tossing it and buying new.
Acrylic is cheaper than dirt compared to the time and frustration that
you're facing by trying to peel the paper. You don't say how thick it
is, but McMaster sells a square foot of the 1/4" (0.236, actually) for
$5.00.
Thermoplastics are attacked by all sorts of things; definitely including
"rubbing" alcohol, which, as someone else said, is isopropyl. I once
destroyed $10,000 worth of surgical accessory instruments with a few
drops of cyanoacrylate (super glue) that I cleverly used as an
anti-rotation solution on a luer lock fitting mounted to a plastic (ABS,
in that case) panel. Of course, it took a week for the things to
disintegrate, so they were already in the customer's hands. The damage
was temporarily disguised by the self-adhesive foil labels that held the
fragments in place as they fell apart.
"jerry wass" <wassb...@tds.net> wrote in message
news:439dc796$1...@newspeer2.tds.net...
Well, 6mm actually:)
> > of the 1/4" (0.236, actually) for
>
> Well, 6mm actually:)
Hey, if it's 12" x 12", it can't be 6 mm thick <smiley emoticon if you
didn't infer it already.> Americans despise the metric system, because
it's based on logic, and it's too easy to work with.
I bought a pallet load of acrylic a few years ago, 4' x 8' sheets, in
nominal 1/4" and 1/2" thicknesses. I spent a week cutting it up into
pieces that were supposed to fit together, first blanking on the table
saw with the fancy plastic cutting blade, and then routing to finished
size with radiused edges. Then I found out that roughly half of the 1/4"
stuff was really 0.250, and the rest was 0.236.
Jerry
Unfortunately the additives used to denature ethanol are
not merely bitter, they are toxic, typically methanol,
or ketones. At one time sulphuric acid was used.
Ethanol denatured with methanol is sometimes still used as
rubbing alcohol. I have some at home. (google for 'surgical spirits')
But you are right, typical rubbing alcohol is 70% isopropynol
with the balance being water.
--
FF
Oh Yeah, I mold Acrylic for a living.
Scott.
www.spektrproducts.com
"pbc76049" <pbc76049@(removethis)charter.net> wrote in message
news:mUeuf.38$%G7...@fe02.lga...
Gee Scott, have a bad morning?
As I recall, the original poster does not have the instructions from the
manufacture (the paper is old, faded, and dried on), let alone an oven that
large.
Our underage teenage neighbors boinking in our yard at night
makes for great breakfast conversations with her parents.
Thank God I don't have to deal with the fallout............
On to the plastic ......
Take a heat gun and warm the plastic locally to about 150ish.
This will remelt the glue holding the paper to the plastic and
leave you with squeaky clean plastic to work with. The glue used
is a low temp thermoset not a solvent based glue so liquids really
just get in the way and get sucked into the sheet to crreate problems later.
Acrylic doesn't get imprintable until 225 with pressure and won't move
until around
250 if forced so you won't have any problems peeling it off. Don't
worry about this temp inducing any residual stresses in the plastic,
I've done this a bunch when I'm working with some old crappy paper sheeted
material and it always comes off perfectly when reheated a bit..........
Hope that sounded a bit better......
Scott.
<age...@gmail.com> wrote in message news:JEkuf.2799$z45.2262@trnddc02...
Garden hose? Sprinkler system set to manual? Bucket of cold water?
Montblack
> Hope that sounded a bit better......
Much . . . Thanks!
Can of silly string? String of M80s? Parachute flare?
<age...@gmail.com> wrote in message news:JEkuf.2799$z45.2262@trnddc02...
>
Much better, no doubt, and thanks for the info. I never had even considered
heat. I just hope this tidbit stays in my forgetful brain, until (not if,
but when) I need to remove some of that hateful old paper again.
--
Jim in NC
You never had those problems in Sedro Woolley did you?
Video camera? Internet connection?
("Heh Joe! Look what your daughter's doin' on this here in-tar-net!
Whar'd she larn that from?")
--
This is by far the hardest lesson about freedom. It goes against
instinct, and morality, to just sit back and watch people make
mistakes. We want to help them, which means control them and their
decisions, but in doing so we actually hurt them (and ourselves)."