T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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2184.1 | Car towel at the car wash | DECXPS::MCLEMENT | WouldyouliketoseemyGrooveTube | Wed May 01 1991 09:45 | 5 |
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You could try a wet cloth... Like a car towel...
Marko
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2184.2 | | SANDY::FRASER | Monsters remonstrated... | Wed May 01 1991 09:57 | 3 |
|
Windex sometimes works pretty well at breaking the glue down.
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2184.3 | I've done it before ... | RAVEN1::JERRYWHITE | I got a hankerin' ! | Wed May 01 1991 10:48 | 4 |
| Nail polish remover ...
Scary
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2184.4 | | PELKEY::PELKEY | YOIKES and AWAY!!! | Wed May 01 1991 11:41 | 21 |
| Try this...
get some (good) lemon oil, and SOAK the life out of em... Impregnate the
gunk/paper with this oil,, they should just rub off after a while, with
no harm done to the finish..
If that don't work, try a good wood spirit (like turpentine)
and try to clean the wood.... but go gently,, no heavy duty, elbow grease
rubbing.... Nail Polish Remover (RE:Scary) will work, but as
with a Wood Spirit, be careful,, too much elbow grease could/will
damage the finish,, (Unless you're out to refinish it anyway)
The lemon oil is yer best bet,, albeit, a slower process...
---------
40 stickers,, what a yo-yo... Still, nothing beat the 57 strat that
had "Dude" Scratched in the back of it with a pocket knife....
What a great way to hose a vintage axe....
The things peoples do!!!!!
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2184.5 | I use Zippo on my motorcycles all the time... | GSRC::COOPER | Major MIDI Rack Puke (tm) | Wed May 01 1991 11:48 | 9 |
| Use Zippo Lighter fluid. If you use a little elbow grease and
acetone based things (like finger nail polish remover), you'd
definately hose your finish. Lighter fluid contains naptha
and won't hurt anything. I like the idea of lemon oil too, but
Danny Weber said somewhere that that stuff isn't so good either.
Maybe steam ??
jc
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2184.6 | NAPTHA!!!!!!! | LEDS::BURATI | rih-bah...RIH-BAH! | Wed May 01 1991 12:04 | 8 |
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-1: COOP KNOWS!
DEFINITELY USE LIGHTER FLUID! Any other solvent is probably going to
ruin the finish, especially acetone (lacquer thinner). Besides, lighter
fluid works better than anything else regardless of the finish.
--rjb
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2184.7 | another source of naptha | COGITO::SULLIVAN | Singing for our lives | Wed May 01 1991 12:26 | 9 |
|
Richard Stanley told me to use naptha to get some glue off my guitar
(when I was young and foolish, I bought a guitar pickup that was held
on by velcro strips, which I let them glue to my guitar).
Coleman's camp stove fuel contains naptha, so I used some of that. It
worked great. I wiped it down with a damp cloth afterwards.
Justine
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2184.8 | hairdryer | RAVEN1::BLAIR | Need a hot tune and a cold one | Wed May 01 1991 13:58 | 6 |
|
You might try using a hairdryer to help soften and peel off the
stickers, then go back with the mineral spirits (I like Color Tile
brand cement remover) to remove the remaining residue.
-pat
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2184.9 | Lock-Ease | TOOK::SUDAMA | Living is easy with eyes closed... | Wed May 01 1991 14:00 | 14 |
| Definitely don't use nail polish remover, it will almost certainly
attack the lacquer. *My* suggestion is to use Lock-Ease, or some other
graphite-based lubricant of that nature. Someone told me about this a
few years ago when I was complaining about why department stores always
stick price tags on things like plastic items that can't be removed
without damaging the finish. They told me to try putting a few drops of
Lock-Ease on them, and I've been a believer ever since. There's
something in the lubricant that dissolves the glue used in stickers,
and seems to have no other affect on anything I've ever used it on. You
just put on a few drops, let it soak in for a minute, and wipe the
thing off. It does leave a slight oily residue that you could then
remove with any normal guitar cleaner/polish.
- Ram
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2184.10 | Stickers Galore!!! | WASTED::tomg | Danger: Slow Thinker at Work | Wed May 01 1991 15:10 | 9 |
|
If this is the guitar I'm thinking of, I don't know what the
previous owner was thinking of. It has tons of AKG
stickers all over it.
Did you get this at that "Well Know" New England
music store chain? ;^)
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2184.11 | | SALEM::TAYLOR_J | | Wed May 01 1991 15:25 | 4 |
| THAT'S the one , I wish the ex-owner would have tried a little less
"custonizing" on it
Yep, got it at Fathers trashy melodies on the Tyngsboro border.
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2184.12 | congrats on a good deal and shhhhhhhhhh | LEDS::BURATI | rih-bah...RIH-BAH! | Wed May 01 1991 15:48 | 5 |
| Now that we know all the secrets of removing adhesives, let's
keep it to ourselves and not tell the people that run these
stores.
..
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2184.13 | Great for that heavy metal "big hair" look too. | WEORG::WIEGLER | | Wed May 01 1991 16:26 | 8 |
| I second the suggestion of using a hairdryer. I used to work in a
bookstore and we used a hairdryer to remove the SALE stickers off the
hardcover books. Worked great.
I don't know if it will work on a guitar finish, but it's sure worth a
try.
Willy
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2184.14 | | DNEAST::GREVE_STEVE | Greee Veee King | Wed May 01 1991 16:41 | 7 |
|
nah, wet sand em off!!! Shucks, just kidding, I vote for lemon
oil too!!
Steve
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2184.15 | | MILNER::WSC100::COLLUM | Oscar's only ostrich oiled an orange owl today | Wed May 01 1991 17:21 | 8 |
| Hell, if it was my strat, I'd just razor-scrape them off. ;^) Screw the
finish!
I thought the wet sanding idea would work, too.
:) :) :) :)
Will
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2184.16 | Heat it up. | MILKWY::JACQUES | Vintage taste, reissue budget | Wed May 01 1991 22:09 | 12 |
| I had some nasty stickers on a rack. I tried using mineral spirits.
It removed some of the less stuborn ones, but there was one that
had a layer of plastic in the middle. The only thing that would
work on the plastic sticker was to apply heat. This is the standard
way of removing bumper stickers from cars, but I would be real careful
applying heat to a guitar. Use heat as a last resort, and start off
with the dryer held a foot away. Gradually get closer until the sticker
starts to show some signs of softening.
You'll never see any stickers on any of my gear !!
Mark
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2184.17 | | SALEM::TAYLOR_J | | Thu May 02 1991 08:13 | 6 |
| Well, all the stickers are off the guitar now, I just sprayed 'em
with windex and waited about 15 minutes, sprayed them once more
and
5 minutes later slid them all off. thanks for all the inputs
JT B*)
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2184.18 | | PELKEY::PELKEY | YOIKES and AWAY!!! | Thu May 02 1991 14:05 | 6 |
| clap-clap-clap-clap----
and I'll just bet you could EAT off that Guild right now!!!
Don't it amaze you at how some people are just so rude to nice
instruments.
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2184.19 | TEXWIPES | OTOA01::ELLACOTT | pancake maverick | Fri May 03 1991 11:32 | 12 |
| TEXWIPES!! These alcohol (isopropl) soaked pads work quite well at
disolving almost any glue and usually won't damage finishes. Just talk
to your local friendly Field, I mean Customer, no dammit I mean Service
Rep (Digital that is)...The name keeps changing but the drudgery is the
same. Anyways just test on of these in a inconspicuous spot first. The
alcohol with soak through most paper stickers. Rubbing the sticker
first before trying to peel it will warm up the glue enough sometimes
to get the thing off in one piece, but you gotta use enough pressure to
warm up your fingers good too!! JMHO and experience
FJE
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2184.20 | | PELKEY::PELKEY | YOIKES and AWAY!!! | Fri May 03 1991 12:02 | 8 |
| <<TEXWIPES!!
YIKES!!!! and watch that laquer SCA---REAM with pain...
Isopropal Alchol AINT good for wood finishes... Just the
facts mam...
Stick with the lemon oil,, never do you wrong...
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2184.21 | Lemon Oil - But be careful | NEEPS::IRVINE | IT (S A MONSTER) | Wed Jul 17 1991 08:44 | 10 |
| I can't beleive I've been outta this file since MAY!!!!
I agree with .19 regarding Field/Customer/Digital-Service Engineers
being the people to talk to about TEXWIPES, and my rates are very good
indeed.... but as .20 said not on wood!!!! they also cause problems on
some plastics.... but for getting stickers off of metalic cases etc...
this stuff id the nads!
Bonzo
(they're pretty good for curing hangovers as well) 8*)
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