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What to do when plastic becomes sticky?

F

Fred McKenzie

Jan 1, 1970
0
Over the years, I've had several pieces of equipment with plastic parts
that have become sticky. The latest is the rubberized part of a Sears
Craftsman High Temperature Infrared Thermometer. There is also the
rubberized case of a Radio Shack HTX-200 Two Meter Handheld radio.

Does anyone know of a treatment for these sticky surfaces?

Fred
 
R

Rich Webb

Jan 1, 1970
0
Over the years, I've had several pieces of equipment with plastic parts
that have become sticky. The latest is the rubberized part of a Sears
Craftsman High Temperature Infrared Thermometer. There is also the
rubberized case of a Radio Shack HTX-200 Two Meter Handheld radio.

Does anyone know of a treatment for these sticky surfaces?

Know? No, but a couple of ideas. A clear acrylic coating might work.
Mask off the unaffected areas and airbrush on a light coat or two of
Future acrylic. http://www.swannysmodels.com/TheCompleteFuture.html

Or, just try rubbing the sticky sections with talc?
 
B

Boris Mohar

Jan 1, 1970
0
Over the years, I've had several pieces of equipment with plastic parts
that have become sticky. The latest is the rubberized part of a Sears
Craftsman High Temperature Infrared Thermometer. There is also the
rubberized case of a Radio Shack HTX-200 Two Meter Handheld radio.

Does anyone know of a treatment for these sticky surfaces?

Fred

Try vinegar. Let us know if it worked.
 
F

Fred McKenzie

Jan 1, 1970
0
Robert Baer said:
Methinks the plastic is slowly decomposing - so no treatment will
stop the problem.

Robert-

That is what I was thinking. I was hoping there was some chemical that
would "passivate" the decomposing plastic.

I have some 100% Isopropyl Alcohol (fuel line water remover) that I'll
try, just in case that works. If it does, I expect it will just be a
matter of time before the remaining plastic starts to decompose.

Fred
 
F

Fred McKenzie

Jan 1, 1970
0
robb said:
i treated it to a bath in %91 Isopropyl alcohol and it disolved
and washed the sticky coating completely away exposing the hard
rubber or plastic under part.

Robb-

I liked the idea of using alcohol because it would probably not hurt the
underlying plastic. I tried some Isopropyl Alcohol (fuel line water
remover) on the Infrared Thermometer. Just as you said, it wiped away
the sticky coating.

I was surprised that the "rubberized" surface was actually a coating
that had been painted onto the plastic. The alcohol acted as a paint
remover. If I can disassemble the Two Meter Handheld radio's case, I'll
give it a try as well. It is just too intricate to clean without
getting sticky stuff inside the radio.

Fred
 

timetraveler

Jun 30, 2010
1
Joined
Jun 30, 2010
Messages
1
Thanks for posting. I have a hairdryer whose plastic-covered handle was sticky. I tried soap, oil, and Goo-Gone. Nothing worked until I found this thread. I cleaned it with 70% isopropyl rubbing alcohol (because that's what I had) and no more sticky handle. I then applied the same treatment to the electric cord of my Kitchen Aide mixer that I thought for years was persistently gathering kitchen grease. No more sticky cord!
 
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