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Thread: Dont try this EVER
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03-13-2010, 02:22 AM #11"Age is an issue of mind over matter. If you don't mind, it doesn't matter." Mark Twain
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03-13-2010, 02:25 AM #12
There was a story on the news here a couple days ago, a police officer thought he smelled a natural gas leak in the bathroom of a building (maybe a police station? I didn't really catch.) so he decided to check.
With a lighter.
Blew a hole through two floors and the roof.
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03-13-2010, 03:12 AM #13
Williams to the rescue.
It is oil.
You get oil off your hands with hand soap.
Press it between masses of newspaper to express
as much as you can. If there is no hardware run
over it with a car....
Then lather, rinse, repeat for about 1/4 of a puck of Williams
with a $7.00 boar brush. You can also use other common
detergent cleaners even Boraxo hand soap..... You can
skip the boar brush and just rub the puck of Williams on
the strop and scrub with a kitchen fingernail brush.
A bar of green Lava soap might also work....
When enough oil is out you should be good to go.
Saddle soap is good for the last bit of cleaning.
Since oil is a lubricant this almost makes sense.
Beef or bacon fat (without the salt) would have been a
better try. N.B. If you have pets, bacon or beef fat would
make a chew toy.
Williams is cheaper and safer, but, if you have a
well ventilated outside place white gas for a camp
stove has no additives the way auto gasoline does.
Others have flamed this idea...
What you want for draw is an oil that gets gummy
when left in the air. You can scorch some canola
vegetable oil and get a gummy mess. . Try
that. The oxidation happens without heat for most
leather strop dressings but takes a long time. The
ultra thin layer of oil that your hand applies if you
rub a strop each day does exactly the right thing....
Wood workers can compare and contrast boiled and
raw linseed oil and also tung oil finishes. It all hinges
on thin layer on thin layer... hours or days apart...
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03-13-2010, 05:45 AM #14
Soaps would work but detergents would be to harsh for leather. I think the rolling pin/paper method would be safest and most reliable. Jan Ivar, you crazy man!LOL
It is easier to fool people than to convince them they have been fooled. Twain
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03-13-2010, 07:00 AM #15
- Join Date
- Jan 2010
- Location
- Terre Haute/Lafayette Indiana
- Posts
- 98
Thanked: 17I wouldn't try the cat litter idea, it would probably make the strop like fine sandpaper when you were done. Then we see a post "how to get rocks out of my strop!"
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03-13-2010, 11:11 AM #16
Now how to get rid of the residue radiation?
lathering and rubbing does seem to work
still got an oily surface tho
I think ill let it rest for today
Do you think break cleaner is to harsh?
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03-13-2010, 04:48 PM #17
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03-13-2010, 05:33 PM #18
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03-13-2010, 06:59 PM #19
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03-13-2010, 07:00 PM #20