getting PL premium off your hands

Helpful hints on how to build 'em, and where to get the stuff you need.
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brodave2
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getting PL premium off your hands

#1 Post by brodave2 »

not the best, but it works. I wipe all I can off with a paper towel, then I wash my hands with soap and water. The water makes the PL tack up, then I wipe all I can off again with paper towels. It doesn't get it all off, but it does better than anything else I've found. Of course, the best is to wear latex gloves, which I detest.

bgavin
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#2 Post by bgavin »

Mineral spirits works very well while PL is wet.

Once it dries on your hands, sand paper or sand blasting is an alternative.

:mrgreen:

I don't wait until it dries, because those options remove too much additional skin.
My biggest worry is that when I'm dead and gone, my wife will sell my toys for what I said I paid for them.

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SoundInMotionDJ
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Re: getting PL premium off your hands

#3 Post by SoundInMotionDJ »

+1 for mineral spirits. I keep a small container near the bench when I'm working with PL. A quick wipe keeps hands, tools, work surfaces, etc clean. then again, I was getting good enough after a couple of sessions to keep the mess (mostly) contained.
brodave2 wrote:Of course, the best is to wear latex gloves, which I detest.
I found that gloves were a double edged sword. Yes, my hands did stay cleaner. But everything else was messier. With gloves, I could not feel a little dab of Pl on my hands...so then I went to pick up a tool, or move the work in progress, or adjust the saw, etc, etc - after a couple of hours I had PL on every surface that I'd touched. So, I opted to work (mostly) gloveless, and to clean my hands as I went.

Of course, there is nothing that will get the PL off the caulking gun at the point. :wink:

--Stan Graves
10 T39S + 10 DR200 + 1 T48

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Bill Fitzmaurice
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Re: getting PL premium off your hands

#4 Post by Bill Fitzmaurice »

SoundInMotionDJ wrote:
Of course, there is nothing that will get the PL off the caulking gun at the point.
Water pump pliers.

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brodave2
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#5 Post by brodave2 »

Water pump pliers.
We always called those "channellocks", due to the most common brand name. Back when the folks up north of us got tired of the cold winters and came down here to the Houston area en masse, some of our new friends referred to "water pump pliers" and at first we had no idea what they were talking about. Well, time passes and we adjust, I now know what water pump pliers are. I sometimes leave a drywall screw in the end of the PL snout to have something to grab hold of to pull the plug out. If you give it long enough, the entire snout will get hard. I then saw it off flush with a hack saw, and sometimes can get quite a bit more out, although it makes a very wide bead.

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Tim A
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#6 Post by Tim A »

Use a 16 penny nail in the end of the tube. If you cut the end small enough it'll stay good for months.

Mineral spritis on your hands and tools.

PL does not stick to the nylon nozzle worth a crap. But, I give it and the nail a wipe with mineral spirits before I break the seal. Works like a champ.

Jeff Beaird
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#7 Post by Jeff Beaird »

I found that gloves were a double edged sword. Yes, my hands did stay cleaner. But everything else was messier. With gloves, I could not feel a little dab of Pl on my hands...so then I went to pick up a tool, or move the work in progress, or adjust the saw, etc, etc - after a couple of hours I had PL on every surface that I'd touched. So, I opted to work (mostly) gloveless, and to clean my hands as I went.
I keep a can of carburator cleaner nearby. I spray a little in my hands or on a rag and the PL comes right off! Or if I make a big mess, I break out the clean-up solvent.
If you can imagine it, I can build it..!

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brodave2
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#8 Post by brodave2 »

mineral spirits didn't work for me. I haven't tried carburetor cleaner.

DJ Mark
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#9 Post by DJ Mark »

I learned that PL is really bad for your skin the hard way since i am working on some omni tops...Wearing gloves helps a ton...Doesnt make a difference when you use so much PL....Mineral spirits help...also soak your hands in hot soapy water...and then scrub off with a sponge...
"Powerful, musical, accurate"- Carver

(2)DR200's
(2)Tuba 24's MkII's
DCX 2496
Carver PM-175 (X 2)
QSC RMX 850

Omni 10.5 Line array in the works(?)

WB
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#10 Post by WB »

This is what I use,

Image
smells nice too.

Mark Coward
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#11 Post by Mark Coward »

Once it dries, I've found nothing will take it off. At least it will wear off your skin eventually, what I hate is I end up getting globs on my jeans, and after it dries it's permanent. Looks kind of like boogers or vomit :oops:
Mark Coward

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Art Coates
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#12 Post by Art Coates »

i'd be wary of solvents - being that they can be absorbed through the skin. i use a pumice stone, soap & water to get off the dried stuff. better yet, wear gloves.

WB
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#13 Post by WB »

Art Coates wrote:i'd be wary of solvents - being that they can be absorbed through the skin.
Correct, and I should have mentioned to wash with soap and water right afterwards.

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Tom
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#14 Post by Tom »

Before working with PL, paint, etc:

Lotion up your hands with something very oily - vaseline, bag balm, etc.

Basically if your hands are oily, then the PL has a hard time sticking, since
PL cures with water in the skin.

Even dry skin makes a good bond with PL. Conversely, greasy skin makes a poor bond with PL.

DJ Mark
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Location: Downers Grove and Normal, IL

#15 Post by DJ Mark »

Tom wrote:Before working with PL, paint, etc:

Lotion up your hands with something very oily - vaseline, bag balm, etc.

Basically if your hands are oily, then the PL has a hard time sticking, since
PL cures with water in the skin.

Even dry skin makes a good bond with PL. Conversely, greasy skin makes a poor bond with PL .
Awesome idea. I am going to try that when finishing up my tops... :D
"Powerful, musical, accurate"- Carver

(2)DR200's
(2)Tuba 24's MkII's
DCX 2496
Carver PM-175 (X 2)
QSC RMX 850

Omni 10.5 Line array in the works(?)

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