<VV> Fw: Re: overspray
Timothy T Werner
wern3 at juno.com
Thu Feb 24 08:14:34 EST 2005
--------- Forwarded message ----------
From: "Marc Sheridan" <sheridanma at adelphia.net>
To: "Timothy T Werner" <wern3 at juno.com>
Date: Wed, 23 Feb 2005 17:18:57 -0500
Subject: Re: overspray
Message-ID: <000a01c519f5$ab25f2c0$2db4a645 at ironoh.adelphia.net>
References: <20050223.084051.-200601.0.wern3 at juno.com>
Tim,
That's a good tip. Why don't you post it to the list? It sure is better
than
what I've seen posted, like steel wool and laquer thinner.
By the way, I'm not the one that asked the original question, but I do
appreciate the tip.
Marc
----- Original Message -----
From: "Timothy T Werner" <wern3 at juno.com>
To: <sheridanma at adelphia.net>
Sent: Wednesday, February 23, 2005 8:40 AM
Subject: overspray
> Marc
> I am an optician, and to polish soft plastics like polycarbonate and
CR-
> 39 and styrene.(I think that is what those gauge covers are). We use
> "silvo" silver polish and a disc of foam rubber. Not the tuff stuff
they
> make sponges for doing dishes but the weak stuff used to pack
instruments
> in boxes, and make cheap furniture cushions out of. You can use double
> sided sticky tape and stick the disc to your disk sander on your drill,
> soak the sponge well first, get the lens wet with water, it will polish
> plastic up better than new.
> Tim
> ps if you cannot find the old ammonia - smelling silvo, ( i am having
> trouble getting it) you may get a bottle of "polypal" plastic polish
form
> an optical supply place.
>
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