"no(SPAM)vasys" <"no(SPAM)vasys"@adelphia.net> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> Fred wrote:
>> My lacquer thinner ate through 10 pairs of nitrite gloves this morning
>> trying to do some cleanup work. I have some heavy duty chemical
>> resistance gloves but those are too bulky to do for any detail work so
>> what kind of thin protective gloves to use for lacquer thinner?
>
> Nitrile gloves should not dissolve in lacquer. Are you sure they weren't
> latex?
>
> --
> Jack Novak
> Buffalo, NY - USA
> [email protected]
> (Remove -SPAM- to send email)
I don't buy latex anymore just nitrile gloves - the blue and purple ones,
two different brands. I noticed it rip, not dissolve, at the thumb area a
lot faster with lacquer thinner.
Fred wrote:
>
>
> I don't buy latex anymore just nitrile gloves - the blue and purple ones,
> two different brands. I noticed it rip, not dissolve, at the thumb area a
> lot faster with lacquer thinner.
>
>
Nitrile gloves are recommended for lacquers?
See:
http://www.radford.edu/~fac-man/Safety/ChemHyg/appgloves.htm
--
Jack Novak
Buffalo, NY - USA
[email protected]
(Remove -SPAM- to send email)
I would try polyethylene gloves. They are ultra-cheap, and used by the
food industry. I haven't tried them myself, but it's based the observation
that it's impossible to glue polyethylene (there's definitely no solvent-based glue)
Fred <[email protected]> wrote:
> My lacquer thinner ate through 10 pairs of nitrite gloves this morning
> trying to do some cleanup work. I have some heavy duty chemical resistance
> gloves but those are too bulky to do for any detail work so what kind of
> thin protective gloves to use for lacquer thinner?
>
>
"Fred" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> Thanks for all the comments. Its suppose to be nitrile gloves, its also
> stated as such on the box, but the consenses indicated it should be
> compatable with lacquer thinner, now I'm not so sure. It does last about
> 5x longer than the latex gloves. Do those gloves have a shelf life? Its
> about 2 years old as I'm down the my last pair out of a box of 100?
>
Neat thing about it is the nitrile gloves are vulnerable to ketones.
Lacquer thinner has MEK, acetone and others in its several formulations.
Sort of a disconnect here.
On Fri, 26 Aug 2005 19:59:47 -0700, the opaque "Fred" <[email protected]>
clearly wrote:
>Thanks for all the comments. Its suppose to be nitrile gloves, its also
>stated as such on the box, but the consenses indicated it should be
>compatable with lacquer thinner, now I'm not so sure. It does last about 5x
>longer than the latex gloves. Do those gloves have a shelf life? Its about 2
>years old as I'm down the my last pair out of a box of 100?
The only thing I've found that eats nitrile gloves is methylene
chloride paint stripper. I found that out the hard and painful way.
I doubled up and changed pairs often to finish the job, and will buy a
pair of neoprene gloves for the next stripping job.
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"no(SPAM)vasys" <"no(SPAM)vasys"@adelphia.net> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> Fred wrote:
>
>>
>>
>> I don't buy latex anymore just nitrile gloves - the blue and purple ones,
>> two different brands. I noticed it rip, not dissolve, at the thumb area a
>> lot faster with lacquer thinner.
>
> Nitrile gloves are recommended for lacquers?
>
> See:
>
> http://www.radford.edu/~fac-man/Safety/ChemHyg/appgloves.htm
>
> --
> Jack Novak
> Buffalo, NY - USA
> [email protected]
> (Remove -SPAM- to send email)
Thanks for the link. Great reference.
Fred wrote:
> My lacquer thinner ate through 10 pairs of nitrite gloves this morning
> trying to do some cleanup work. I have some heavy duty chemical resistance
> gloves but those are too bulky to do for any detail work so what kind of
> thin protective gloves to use for lacquer thinner?
>
>
Nitrile gloves should not dissolve in lacquer. Are you sure they
weren't latex?
--
Jack Novak
Buffalo, NY - USA
[email protected]
(Remove -SPAM- to send email)
Thanks for all the comments. Its suppose to be nitrile gloves, its also
stated as such on the box, but the consenses indicated it should be
compatable with lacquer thinner, now I'm not so sure. It does last about 5x
longer than the latex gloves. Do those gloves have a shelf life? Its about 2
years old as I'm down the my last pair out of a box of 100?
On Fri, 26 Aug 2005 13:57:58 -0700, Fred wrote:
> gloves but those are too bulky to do for any detail work so what kind of
> thin protective gloves to use for lacquer thinner?
I had the same question. Turns out that "lacquer thinner" isn't
well-defined. Different manufacturers use different formulations. My can
came from Ace, so I went back and asked for the MSDS. I compared the
ingredients with a chemical resistance chart that came with my nitrile
gloves. Oh No! There is no single glove (or pair...) that is
resistant to everything in the can.
So, get the MSDS for the stuff you have, and only then start looking for
gloves.
--
"Keep your ass behind you"
vladimir a t mad {dot} scientist {dot} com
[email protected] wrote:
> I would try polyethylene gloves.
>
:) I don't think that would be a good idea.
laminated gloves would be his best bet; for disposables, nitrile is
still the glove of choice, but they won't last too long, esp if the
there's a fair amount of ketone in the lacquer thinner.
Dave
Fred wrote:
> My lacquer thinner ate through 10 pairs of nitrite gloves this morning
> trying to do some cleanup work. I have some heavy duty chemical resistance
> gloves but those are too bulky to do for any detail work so what kind of
> thin protective gloves to use for lacquer thinner?
>
>
are you SURE they are nitrile? that's what you are supposed to use,
Fred. maybe they are ultra cheap OR they aren't nitrile after all.
Dave
Fred wrote:
> My lacquer thinner ate through 10 pairs of nitrite gloves this morning
> trying to do some cleanup work. I have some heavy duty chemical resistance
> gloves but those are too bulky to do for any detail work so what kind of
> thin protective gloves to use for lacquer thinner?
>
>
most common gloves at Borgs are vinyl and latex. I get my nitrile's at
Kelly Moore.