Vinyl seats problem
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Vinyl seats problem
How do you clean off 30+ years of grime from vinyl seats. auto glymm takes of some but there still black not blue. Help??
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- Minor Legend
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I tried Jif (without bleach) when I first had Phyllis and it worked well - have to get the residue off of course, but that's easily done. I replaced the interior after a couple of months, however, do I don't know if it would cause any long-term problems.
You could just keep trying the auto glym, reappplying where needed. Oh - washing-up liquid is a very effective degreaser, which could be of some use...
You could just keep trying the auto glym, reappplying where needed. Oh - washing-up liquid is a very effective degreaser, which could be of some use...
Happy Minoring!
Phyllis ~ 1962 Morris Minor 4 Door Deluxe
Black coachwork with Red Duo-Tone Upholstery
Phyllis ~ 1962 Morris Minor 4 Door Deluxe
Black coachwork with Red Duo-Tone Upholstery
Hi, Matt, Gareth,
Washing up liquid will not be very acidic - the short reason is that if it were stongly acidic, the bottles would have to be labelled with the hazard signs! That's a real marketing no no.
Most cosmetic/haousehold products will aim to have a pH (measure of acidity) around 4 - 8 (7 is theoretically neutral). This has the benefit that it's not going to affect the customers skin.
Matt - you're quite right in that the salts will contain H+ ions - however, they also contain the -ve ions as well. It's the proportion of H+ ions that makes a solution acidic. the measure (i.e. pH) is "the negative logarithm (base 10) of the hydrogen ion concentration" - in practice values of 0-3 are strongly acidic, values 9-14 highly alkaline (caustic), with the range 4-8 sort of intermediate. If you take highly pruified water it should have a pH of 7, but it rapidly dissolves the carbon dioxide from the air, and ends up about 5 ish.... Because the scale is logarithmetic the readings are useful, but need a careful interpretation.
Sorry for the long(ish) waffle,
Colin
Washing up liquid will not be very acidic - the short reason is that if it were stongly acidic, the bottles would have to be labelled with the hazard signs! That's a real marketing no no.
Most cosmetic/haousehold products will aim to have a pH (measure of acidity) around 4 - 8 (7 is theoretically neutral). This has the benefit that it's not going to affect the customers skin.
Matt - you're quite right in that the salts will contain H+ ions - however, they also contain the -ve ions as well. It's the proportion of H+ ions that makes a solution acidic. the measure (i.e. pH) is "the negative logarithm (base 10) of the hydrogen ion concentration" - in practice values of 0-3 are strongly acidic, values 9-14 highly alkaline (caustic), with the range 4-8 sort of intermediate. If you take highly pruified water it should have a pH of 7, but it rapidly dissolves the carbon dioxide from the air, and ends up about 5 ish.... Because the scale is logarithmetic the readings are useful, but need a careful interpretation.
Sorry for the long(ish) waffle,
Colin
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I dont think Matt realised that the board had its own Chemist.the negative logarithm (base 10) of the hydrogen ion concentration"
Another good cleaner if its still available was made by Decorsil and was designed for viynl seats there must be a modern equivalent as there is still plenty of vinyl furniture around.
Cheers
Kevin
Lovejoy 1968 Smoke Grey Traveller (gone to a new home after13 years)
Herts Branch Member
Moderator MMOC 44706
Kevin
Lovejoy 1968 Smoke Grey Traveller (gone to a new home after13 years)
Herts Branch Member
Moderator MMOC 44706
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- Minor Fan
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I took everything out of Minerva and used Tesco's all surface cleaner, a soft scouring pad and the shower cubicle in my old flat! Came up beautifully clean (obviously not like new as 35 years will have their effects) and then after all that hard work lost it all in the fire
(Not my fault)

Philip, Lynda and the cars.

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You will have to pardon my non Uni education and ignorance on these matters but when I was still in engineering we never had any chemist shops in the factoriesChemical Engineering

Cheers
Kevin
Lovejoy 1968 Smoke Grey Traveller (gone to a new home after13 years)
Herts Branch Member
Moderator MMOC 44706
Kevin
Lovejoy 1968 Smoke Grey Traveller (gone to a new home after13 years)
Herts Branch Member
Moderator MMOC 44706
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Practical engineering requires a sound basis of theory, but I think I know what you meant.Moggies were made using practical enginering and not using theoretical engineering then.
There's nowt worse than someone with theory knowledge but no idea how to use it in a practical way, and even less idea how to guesstimate whether they are completely wrong or not ( but you do come across a lot of them).
I try and get my guys to cross check their theory with a real result before committing themselves on a design and this tends to wake them up to the real world.
I still trust a rough bench test more than a PC result but when you can get both to agree then the risk is low.