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Garland Gray II January 20th 07 04:18 AM

Removing silicone residue
 
Thanks for all the responses.
This morning I asked around about hexane, but couldn't find anything
definitive, so I called 3M tech support, and they said to use "Brakeclean"
to remove the silicone film. I had some, so that is what I used. I then
bonded with some JB Weld, which also was on hand, and it's tighter than a
tick now.
Regarding possible failure from different coefficients of thermal expansion,
I don't think it will be subjected to enough temperature variation for this
to be a factor. I didn't say what sort of jewelry it is --a pendant on a
necklass .

"Garland Gray II" wrote in message
...
Actually this is not on a boat, but same principles will apply.

I need to reglue--with epoxy I hope--something that appears to have been
glued with silicone. I recall reading of a solution that could be used to
wash the silicone residue that would otherwise prevent good adhesion.
Maybe powdered detergent and kerosene ? Sounds messy, but my memory might
be in left field.

Any ideas that work ?






Ian Malcolm January 20th 07 08:47 AM

Removing silicone residue
 
Garland Gray II wrote:

Thanks for all the responses.
This morning I asked around about hexane, but couldn't find anything
definitive, so I called 3M tech support, and they said to use "Brakeclean"
to remove the silicone film. I had some, so that is what I used. I then
bonded with some JB Weld, which also was on hand, and it's tighter than a
tick now.
Regarding possible failure from different coefficients of thermal expansion,
I don't think it will be subjected to enough temperature variation for this
to be a factor. I didn't say what sort of jewelry it is --a pendant on a
necklass .

Well, follow up in a month or so and tell us how its holding up.
Glad it worked out for you.

--
Ian Malcolm. London, ENGLAND. (NEWSGROUP REPLY PREFERRED)
ianm[at]the[dash]malcolms[dot]freeserve[dot]co[dot]uk
[at]=@, [dash]=- & [dot]=. *Warning* HTML & 32K emails -- NUL:
'Stingo' Albacore #1554 - 15' Early 60's, Uffa Fox designed,
All varnished hot moulded wooden racing dinghy.


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