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Without going into detail(which would only prove embarrassing) I ended =
up with some rubber marks in the panel of a door in progress made by a =
dead blow mallet. Any suggestions on how to safely remove them. They are =
on the panel of the door which is just 1/4" oak plywood. I tried the old =
soft "ink eraser" but now worry about having done so.=20
--=20
SwampBug
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<DIV><FONT face=3D"Comic Sans MS">Without going into detail(which would =
only prove=20
embarrassing) I ended up with some rubber marks in the panel of a door =
in=20
progress made by a dead blow mallet. Any suggestions on how to safely =
remove=20
them. They are on the panel of the door which is just 1/4" oak plywood. =
I tried=20
the old soft "ink eraser" but now worry about having done so. =
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face=3D"Comic Sans MS">
<DIV><BR>-- <BR>SwampBug<BR>- - - - - - - - - - - -</DIV>
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I was afraid that would only smear it. . . no interference with the gel
staining later?
--
SwampBug
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<[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> On Mon, 7 Jun 2004 07:16:23 -0500, "SwampBug" <[email protected]>
> wrote:
>
>>Without going into detail(which would only prove embarrassing) I ended up
>>with some rubber marks in the panel of a door in progress made by a dead
>>blow mallet. Any suggestions on how to safely remove them. They are on the
>>panel of the door which is just 1/4" oak plywood. I tried the old soft
>>"ink eraser" but now worry about having done so.
>
>
> laquer thinner
>> If you're staining it, why worry?
Because it is highly unlikely that the undesirable smear will resemble
anything natural. I would be less concerned if I were going to paint it with
rustoleum or something equally dumb.
--
SwampBug
- - - - - - - - - - - -
"Larry Jaques" <novalidaddress@di\/ersify.com> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> On Mon, 7 Jun 2004 10:13:53 -0500, "SwampBug" <[email protected]>
> calmly ranted:
>
>>I was afraid that would only smear it. . . no interference with the gel
>>staining later?
>
> If you're staining it, why worry?
>
> Try denatured alcohol. It won't dissolve it as quickly and
> may minimize any smearing.
>
>
> ------------------------------------------------------------------
> Vote early, Vote often, Vote for Chad!
> http://diversify.com Comprehensive Website & Database Development
>
Thanks, i will tread lightly. <s>
--
SwampBug
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<[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> On Mon, 7 Jun 2004 10:13:53 -0500, "SwampBug" <[email protected]>
> wrote:
>
>>I was afraid that would only smear it. . . no interference with the gel
>>staining later?
>
>
>
> well, smearing is a possibility, so test on scrap.
>
> gel stains are made to cover over stuff that absorbes unevenly, so you
> might be able to get decent results even if it does smear. again, test
> on scrap.
thanks, i will try one of those also.
--
SwampBug
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"Randy" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
>I would start with a white vinyl eraser, pentel brand comes to mind, but
>any one should be close enough. They will take felt marker off a
>refridgerator, and stamp ink off formica, so now I always try one first.
>
> SwampBug wrote:
>
>> Without going into detail(which would only prove embarrassing) I ended up
>> with some rubber marks in the panel of a door in progress made by a dead
>> blow mallet. Any suggestions on how to safely remove them. They are on
>> the panel of the door which is just 1/4" oak plywood. I tried the old
>> soft "ink eraser" but now worry about having done so.
>>
>> --
>> SwampBug
>> - - - - - - - - - - - -
>>
>
I would start with a white vinyl eraser, pentel brand comes to mind, but
any one should be close enough. They will take felt marker off a
refridgerator, and stamp ink off formica, so now I always try one first.
SwampBug wrote:
> Without going into detail(which would only prove embarrassing) I ended
> up with some rubber marks in the panel of a door in progress made by a
> dead blow mallet. Any suggestions on how to safely remove them. They are
> on the panel of the door which is just 1/4" oak plywood. I tried the old
> soft "ink eraser" but now worry about having done so.
>
> --
> SwampBug
> - - - - - - - - - - - -
>
>
On Mon, 7 Jun 2004 10:13:53 -0500, "SwampBug" <[email protected]>
calmly ranted:
>I was afraid that would only smear it. . . no interference with the gel
>staining later?
If you're staining it, why worry?
Try denatured alcohol. It won't dissolve it as quickly and
may minimize any smearing.
------------------------------------------------------------------
Vote early, Vote often, Vote for Chad!
http://diversify.com Comprehensive Website & Database Development
On Mon, 7 Jun 2004 10:13:53 -0500, "SwampBug" <[email protected]>
wrote:
>I was afraid that would only smear it. . . no interference with the gel
>staining later?
well, smearing is a possibility, so test on scrap.
gel stains are made to cover over stuff that absorbes unevenly, so you
might be able to get decent results even if it does smear. again, test
on scrap.
On Mon, 7 Jun 2004 07:16:23 -0500, "SwampBug" <[email protected]>
wrote:
>Without going into detail(which would only prove embarrassing) I ended up with some rubber marks in the panel of a door in progress made by a dead blow mallet. Any suggestions on how to safely remove them. They are on the panel of the door which is just 1/4" oak plywood. I tried the old soft "ink eraser" but now worry about having done so.
laquer thinner