dpetrzelka
Member
- Joined
- Mar 13, 2014
- Messages
- 165
Yes, I'm that guy who spent an afternoon cleaning tools. We had just done a bunch of fiberglass and putty sanding with the RO90, ETS150, and some fiberglass cutting with the Carvex. All of the tools needed to be blown out (with respirator on) and wiped down - to top it off I wanted to clean up the systainers.
They had resin, paint splatters and various marks from use in and out of the shop.
I can now vouch for the use of Mr Clean original Magic Erasers for cleaning systainers - they removed almost every mark. I had the best results using them dry - despite the instruction saying that the sponges are water activated. Just the lightest brush with the dry Magic Eraser took most marks off, some worked better wet with a little more pressure.
I would use caution on older yellowed systainers, as I believe these remove a very little surface material as part of the cleaning action. On newer systainers I see no evidence of having cleaned any of the marks off.
Your milage may vary.
They had resin, paint splatters and various marks from use in and out of the shop.
I can now vouch for the use of Mr Clean original Magic Erasers for cleaning systainers - they removed almost every mark. I had the best results using them dry - despite the instruction saying that the sponges are water activated. Just the lightest brush with the dry Magic Eraser took most marks off, some worked better wet with a little more pressure.
I would use caution on older yellowed systainers, as I believe these remove a very little surface material as part of the cleaning action. On newer systainers I see no evidence of having cleaned any of the marks off.
Your milage may vary.