T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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525.1 | I have decent luck. | KAOS::STOLL | | Wed Jan 13 1993 23:49 | 14 |
| I have had good luck using white-out thinner, but you have to go slow
with it on a q-tip. Make sure you change the q-tip after it starts to
pickup color off the card so you dont smear the colors.Go extra slow
on card fronts and don't put to mutch pressure on the card.If the card
starts to soak up allot of liquid take a break and let the card dry
out. Most important** do this on a clean flat surface preferably
card board. I once lost a Puckett Rookie after doing this on top of a
plastic card holder. The card soaked up the thinner and the plastic
melted to the card. 8*( ouch! If you have any late 80's commons to
practice on that would help you. This process doesn't work on the
brown crystalized tape marks on old cards though. Anybody that has
had luck with other products or proceedures I would be interested in
them also!
-Wayne-
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525.2 | | FUTURE::JST_ONGE | John St.Onge USDSL DTN 275-2715 | Thu Jan 14 1993 07:36 | 42 |
| I've heard rubbing the cards with nylon will remove some of it.
Here's a wax removal process detailed in SCD a few years back. They
said it worked good on 1990 Donruss and Fleer cards.
Getting started:
Get a common household iron and a small roll of paper towels.
Step 1:
Lay a sheet of paper towel down on a table.
Step 2:
Place your wax backed Fleer or Donruss card face down on the
paper towel.
Step 3:
Put the iron on a low setting. If it's too hot it'll curl the
cards.
Step 4:
Rub the iron over the card back and forth for about five or six
seconds.
Step 5:
Set the iron to the side .... take another paper towel and rub
the melted wax off the card. Should take about 10 seconds.
Finally:
At this point you should have a card free of wax. I never tried
it, but they said it works pretty good. They said you should try
it on some commons first. They said they didn't try it on Topps,
but then the Topps card backs are so wax stained anyway, I don't
think it would help that much.
John
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525.3 | Nylon or tissue paper... | AWECIM::MCAULIFFE | | Thu Jan 14 1993 10:01 | 7 |
| If the wax is on the face of the card, try the nylon as John mentioned
or just some soft tissue paper. This works fine for me, although be
extra careful with older cards. Try to use a few separate sheets per
card, since you wouldn't want to rub wax back on another card...
Good luck,
Dan
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525.4 | NYLONs | WR2FOR::CHOY_LA | | Thu Jan 14 1993 12:35 | 3 |
| Nylons (i.e., panty hose) work just fine in removing wax from the
fronts of cards. Just make sure that the nylons aren't useable for
their original intent ...
|
525.5 | pantyhose and baseball cards whodathunkit? | RIPPLE::KOPEC_ST | Seattle WA 206-(DTN545)-637-4207 | Thu Jan 14 1993 14:47 | 2 |
| thx guys. I tried the nylons approach and it worked great!
man this is fun... reliving the 60s...
|
525.6 | Two methods that DIDN'T work... | ICS::LERRA | | Fri Jan 15 1993 09:02 | 18 |
| Okay, I'll let you all know about a couple of BLUNDERS I've pulled
while trying to remove wax! Go ahead, laugh if you must, but if this
can save someones' son from the pain I inflicted on mine, it'll be worth
it!
1. '84 Topps Mattingly rookie, the most perfectly centered and colored
one I'd ever seen! Problem : wax on back. Solution : the IRON method!
Here's a clue...make sure you DO NOT use a steam iron! Even if you
can't get any water to shake out, there may be water in the system! I
won't go into the gory details.
2. This was far less painful, for my son, because the card was mine. It
was a second year Yount, with a ton of wax on the back ( I thought back
then the wax would have been on the front, but was glad it wasn't!)
Anyway, this time the iron was dry. I placed the card on a book in
order to have a firm surface on which to iron it. The wax came off
pretty well, but the card got WELDED to the book cover! So, don't
forget to place the card on a paper towel.
dennis
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525.7 | Can take the wax off the front... | AWECIM::MCAULIFFE | | Fri Jan 15 1993 09:51 | 11 |
| >> It was a second year Yount, with a ton of wax on the back ( I thought
>> back then the wax would have been on the front, but was glad it wasn't!)
I'd much rather take wax off the front of the card any day; especially
if its a TOPPS card. With patience, you can get it all off... I've
never been successful in getting wax off the back of a TOPPS card
(Donruss and Fleer is a little different though, because of card
stock).
Dan
|
525.8 | | RAYBOK::DAMIANO | You're overpaid...Hit the road | Fri Jan 15 1993 14:47 | 7 |
| Somewhere in this notes file I posted a method to ge wax off of the
back of Topps cards.
It involved using rubber cement thinner; I tried it a couple of times,
and it worked o.k.
John D.
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525.9 | Panty Hose and a chew. | SONATA::KELLY | | Thu Jan 21 1993 11:07 | 6 |
| Wax off the front with nylons works well for me. I still use the
freezer method for wax and gum on the back and been very lucky.
I put the card in a plastic case and freeze it ( overnight ) and then
take the card out of the case and the freezer and "slap" it in a
table. The gum flies all over the room in chunks.
Mike
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