No, not like Bill Clinton
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| Is it feasible to tint the glass, also? |
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"The deals you miss don’t hurt you”-B.D. Raney Sr.
| quote: Originally posted by armme: Is it feasible to tint the glass, also?
It can be tinted, yes. But 1. It ain’t cheap, lots of glass in a tractor cab. 2. I run at night quite a bit during hay season, and it sure makes it hard to see stumps and other “gotchas”. This is mainly a stop gap until I can get a taller shed built. |
| Posts: 6370 | Location: East Texas | Registered: February 20, 2008 |  
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| 303 as mentioned above is a good one, but it will ultimately depend on the material itself, anything spray/wipe on can only do so much. I use chemical guys as I bought a gallon jug of it for the dash of my truck a few years ago & will have plenty for a long time. It has a UV additive in the plastic of the dash that will off-gas & leave a film on the inside of the windshield that will blind you when the sun is at a low angle. It's also a bastard to clean off. Wiping with a protectant slows that down, a thick layer of dust failed so I guess I'll keep it clean.
There are films that block UV that don't tint (darken) as well. |
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| quote: Originally posted by Hamden106: Larry Brace told me one time Armour All on rubber recoil pads is good to do. Larry was a top gunsmith making extremely fine rifles and stocks
There's a lot of different rubber formulas & more than 1 armor all formula now. I've seen "armor all" eat tire sidewalls when used as tire shine. Brand new to peeling in 2-3 months. Saw date & mileage on receipt, know brand & model well - not an off brand or a frequent problem. Opposite actually. They were fishing for some warranty sympathy, I declined. |
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The cake is a lie!
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| quote: Originally posted by PPinesRon: Vaseline. Silicone tends to "wander."
Wouldn't petroleum cause it to swell? |
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| Wouldn't petroleum cause it to swell? No. From Wikipedia: "It was also recommended by Porsche in maintenance training documentation for lubrication (after cleaning) of "Weatherstrips on Doors, Hood, Tailgate, Sun Roof. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Petroleum_jelly |
| Posts: 90 | Location: South Florida | Registered: April 12, 2015 |  
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| I, too, used to think that petroleum jelly was bad for seals, O-rings, and other rubber containing products. There may be some exceptions but, at least from information I've found, it's safe to use on these materials. One of the sites where I got my info.: https://bobistheoilguy.com/for...nd-seal-swell.23084/
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| Posts: 5104 | Location: Arkansas | Registered: September 04, 2008 |  
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