Tom-D
Taxi to Parking
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- Feb 23, 2005
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Tom-D
After the controversy over strippers in the other thread I decided to do a little research on my own.
I went to our local ACE hardware and our local Home Depot and started to read labels of the off the shelf chemical paint strippers and found that there are only two types, or should I say formulas to be found available to the public.
Of the 7 brand names I could find all but two were solvent based most were acetone, with Methylene Chloride added to do the stripping and (thus my statement to Captain Jack) one was a toluene based, which was a Formby's furniture stripper (varnish type)
Two of the brand names water based containing N-methyl-2-PYROLIDONE, & DIBASIC ESTERS.
I looked that up, it is not ammonia.
So in conclusion, Unless you are ordering chemicals from a company that offers chemicals that they do not sell to the public you are stuck using the strippers I found at the two stores I mentioned
So, the whole discussion of Ammonia was in naught, because it doesn't exist to the public.
I went to our local ACE hardware and our local Home Depot and started to read labels of the off the shelf chemical paint strippers and found that there are only two types, or should I say formulas to be found available to the public.
Of the 7 brand names I could find all but two were solvent based most were acetone, with Methylene Chloride added to do the stripping and (thus my statement to Captain Jack) one was a toluene based, which was a Formby's furniture stripper (varnish type)
Two of the brand names water based containing N-methyl-2-PYROLIDONE, & DIBASIC ESTERS.
I looked that up, it is not ammonia.
So in conclusion, Unless you are ordering chemicals from a company that offers chemicals that they do not sell to the public you are stuck using the strippers I found at the two stores I mentioned
So, the whole discussion of Ammonia was in naught, because it doesn't exist to the public.