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What product do you use to make the hard dark blue trim that goes bow to stern look new and shinny again
If you can tell that the rub rail is blue, it's not that dirty!wavetamer said:What product do you use to make the hard dark blue trim that goes bow to stern look new and shinny again
Doc Stressor said:No Bob, I didn't recommend acetone for removing your scuff marks. I recommended GoofOff, which is a mixture of toluene and xylene.
Here's a little organic chemistry lesson:
Acetone - a polar solvent that mixes readily with water and dries very quickly. It removes scuffs from vinyl/rubber rub rails by dissolving the surface layer, which fuses back as the solvent rapidly evaporates. It isn't very toxic because it is produced as a part of normal human metabolism.
Toluene/xylene - these are much less polar organic compounds that are related to benzene. Neither mixes with water. These are good solvents for many plastics, among other things like synthetic rubber. The xylene is much less volatile than acetone or toluene, so it can soak into a dark scuff mark, dissolve it, and let you wipe it away. This stuff is fairly toxic, so try not to inhale very much. Toluene is what glue sniffers get high from.
Isopropanol (rubbing alcohol) - another polar solvent that is useful on boats. Not toxic unless you drink it. It mixes readily with water. It will remove sap and spider crap from boat surfaces very well. It will also remove excess silicon sealant. But if the sealant is dry, you need to use something like a pot scrubber to loosen it up.
None of these solvents will harm hardened gelcoat, which is thickened epoxy or polyester resin.
Windex? I hate that stuff. It's a mixture of water and isopropanol with a little surfactant added. It's too dilute to do much except clean not too dirty glass and leave a bunch of streaks behind.