| Author |
Help With Frozen YKK Zipper?
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| Dwight 2007-10-27, 1:25 pm |
| I have a duffel of cordura material with a heavy YKK zipper - looks like
an aluminum slider
It is frozen, possibly as a result of salt water.
Is there any solvent that might work without destroying the fabric?
Thanks in advance.
Dwight
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| Dwight wrote:
> I have a duffel of cordura material with a heavy YKK zipper - looks like
> an aluminum slider
>
> It is frozen, possibly as a result of salt water.
>
> Is there any solvent that might work without destroying the fabric?
>
> Thanks in advance.
>
> Dwight
You might try WD 40
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| Dwight wrote:
> I have a duffel of cordura material with a heavy YKK zipper - looks like
> an aluminum slider
>
> It is frozen, possibly as a result of salt water.
>
> Is there any solvent that might work without destroying the fabric?
>
> Thanks in advance.
>
> Dwight
Try WD 40.
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| Dwight 2007-10-29, 3:25 am |
| Chuck wrote:
> Dwight wrote:
>
>
> Try WD 40.
I have tried that, but no luck.
Thanks anyway.
Best
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| Tony Hwang 2007-10-29, 3:25 am |
| Dwight wrote:
> I have a duffel of cordura material with a heavy YKK zipper - looks like
> an aluminum slider
>
> It is frozen, possibly as a result of salt water.
>
> Is there any solvent that might work without destroying the fabric?
>
> Thanks in advance.
>
> Dwight
Hi,
If salt water crystalized, blast of steam or soak in the hot water?
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| Doug Miller 2007-10-29, 1:25 pm |
| In article <13iaj18n7heth4b@corp.supernews.com>, Dwight <dwightnews@earthlink.net> wrote:
>Chuck wrote:
>I have tried that, but no luck.
Try PB Blaster instead. It works a *lot* better than WD40. You should be able
to find it at any auto parts store for about five bucks a can.
--
Regards,
Doug Miller (alphageek at milmac dot com)
It's time to throw all their damned tea in the harbor again.
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| jJim McLaughlin 2007-10-30, 1:25 pm |
| Dwight wrote:
> I have a duffel of cordura material with a heavy YKK zipper - looks like
> an aluminum slider
>
> It is frozen, possibly as a result of salt water.
>
> Is there any solvent that might work without destroying the fabric?
>
> Thanks in advance.
>
> Dwight
It won't destroy the fabric, but it might stain -- a silicon spray
used for lubing
aluminum sliding windows.
Maybe spray a lot into an old tin can, then use a
small artists' brush to apply right on the "slider" and the "track"
parts of the zipper,
working it into the area "under" the "sllder where it grips the "track",
on both
sides of the zipper.
You'll get better control of the application with a small artist's
type paint brush than you will with a spray nozzle.
HTH.
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