lightman
Member
I have a 10ga Browning shotgun with a soft rubberized stock doing this. I chalked it up to possibly getting bug spray containing Deet on it. Maybe not............?
Ship it to me, I'll wrap it in red and ship it back.I am thinking I am just going to have to toss this thing.....really pains me to trash something that works perfect, but I just can't stand to touch it.
Consume consume never stop buying stuff. Don't make it last then you can't sell it again....way of the world I guess.
I have an OLD Nikon range finder, thing has to be 10-15 years old ...
I have a pair of computer mouses that sported some rubbery grippy zones that went to goo. I had success removing the liquifying grippy zone material with patience, q-tips and isopropyl alcohol. It worked because it was applied to a base of smooth plastic.... I know this happens to other plastic gizmos, so does anyone have and solutions for cleaning this stuff, ...
Had a BSA red dot that did the same thing after about 8 years. Called BSA and they sent me a new on free.
Eton radios has this problem and Eton officially recommends a product called “Purple Power Industrial Strength Cleaner/Degreaser” because it is water-based, non-toxic, biodegradable, non-abrasive, and contains no solvents. It appears to work very well.
I've used the stuff a lot on tractors and such, I'd say they lie a little about what's in it. Turned a Oliver mint green one time, it does talk oil and grease off good.That is a shocker, in my experience anything that is labeled as "water-based, non-toxic, biodegradable, non-abrasive, and contains no solvents" generally does not work well at all.
Eton radios has this problem and Eton officially recommends a product called “Purple Power Industrial Strength Cleaner/Degreaser” because it is water-based, non-toxic, biodegradable, non-abrasive, and contains no solvents. It appears to work very well.