Gris
New member
What's best way to remove pine tar from nylon tent material w/o eating thru fabric...?
A pure hydrocarbon such as paint thinner (NOT stripper!!) or odorless mineral spirits should leave the coating intact and the nylon will be completeley untouched. Acetone is a component of old time paint strippers, and may affect the coating, (it'll make your acetone ). Another thing to try is a dishwashing liquid (such as Dawn) straight out of the bottle and rub it into the tar stain.Gris said:precisely my dilemma DP, don't wanna burn up the fabric but it IS on the bottom of my MSR bug tent which has a thicker WP floor than some tents and i can retreat it w/ seam sealer if the coating comes off
just don't wanna burn all the way through
Another approach would be to just rub what you can off on a paper towel and then rub the spot in some dust to block the stickiness. Over time it will likely dry out/oxidize and flake off. Works on my car...Gris said:precisely my dilemma DP, don't wanna burn up the fabric
but it IS on the bottom of my MSR bug tent which has a thicker WP floor than some tents
and i can retreat it w/ seam sealer if the coating comes off
just don't wanna burn all the way through
Tent waterproof coatings are usually urethane.Paradox said:A pure hydrocarbon such as paint thinner (NOT stripper!!) or odorless mineral spirits should leave the coating intact and the nylon will be completeley untouched. Acetone is a component of old time paint strippers, and may affect the coating, (it'll make your acetone ). Another thing to try is a dishwashing liquid (such as Dawn) straight out of the bottle and rub it into the tar stain.
I currently have a problem with squirrels and chipmonks getting into the heating ducts in my house. I have a couple of Havahart traps baited with peanut butter. It works great! I would hate to see what the little ba*tards would do to tent material that smelled like peanut butter.whitelief said:I think (I'm guessing) that the active ingredient in peanut buter which cuts through sap and tar is the oil. I've used vegetable oils with equal success.
It would be prudent to test a small area, but urethanes have a solubility parameter close to acetone and quite far away from OMS. Hence, paint thinner should be okay.DougPaul said:Tent waterproof coatings are usually urethane.
IIRC, you know chemistry better than I do.
Doug
Isopropanol is most easily obtained as "rubbing alcohol" which is about 30% water. Won't work at all. Nail polish removers are frequently acetone based. Although many of the newer ones contain the adipate ester solvents which have fruity odors. Very low toxicity, low flammability, low volitility, but may damage the coatings. DEET will probably make a real mess.Dugan said:I've found 3 things that work: nail polish remover, isopropyl alcohol, and peanut butter. I'm guessing the latter two would be safest for nylon.
Let us know which works best.
I stand corrected.Dugan said:Paradox - I have used rubbing alcohol (70% isopropyl alcohol) to successfully remove pine sap from both skin and cotton clothing.
Pete_Hickey said:Not sure I'd want to use that if I had any intentions of camping in bear country.
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