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I had pine sap on a VW Passat. Bought tar remover and it did nothing. Warm soapy water was a joke. Tried some concentrated orange cleaner and it came right off with little effort. Let it sit just long enough to do the job and then re-wax.
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From what I remember, the idea is to make sure the car's paint is cool, soak a piece of cloth such as gun cleaning patches in whatever you want to use, put it on the sap and let it sit. Keep soaking it and let the cleaner do the work.
Now that I think about it I did use bacon fat many, many years ago and it smelled good too! |
Surprising it took so long for someone to mention the clay bar, its the only safe way to remove sap and pollen.
Off topic a bit but I worked with a guy who's brother was part of the team that invented WD-40. It was an accident, they were trying to invent/develop a water dispersant and it was on the 40th experiment that they came up with WD-40, the lubricant. The same guy invented a machine that would analyze the atmosphere using light refraction or something high tech like that, he applied to take it on the shuttle, it went, he didn't, a version was destined for Mars. Enough of the worthless information but the clay bar is sound advise. I used it on the wifey's car before I tried it on the 930 and it worked great. I took the chainsaw to the culprits. Finn |
I have some clay bar and I'll try it but this stuff does not seem like it will come of that way.
FWIW, this did not happen outside of my place but outside a friend's house where I go frequently to play tennis and hang out. Parking in the shade is always sought out with the strong sun here but this is ridiculous. I can probably experiment on my schit box MB C36 before I try anything on this car. It has been under the same trees. |
I like to use little 2x2 or 4x4 pieces of gauze. Soak them in whatever you are going to use, let them sit. Do it early in the morning when it is cool out, in the garage or shade of course. There are some orange based adhesive removers they have at the hospital that are very handy. Clay bar is more work, but will work.
Don't forget to wax it after, try a spot inside the trunk or under the carpet to see how it does with your paint, whatever you decide to use. I know, duh, obviously, until you forget. |
Don't use finger nail polish remover!
It can contain acetone (the "good" stuff does anyway) - which of course will dissolve your paint! |
Here's a photo:
Could not get a good picture but it's on the roof and windshield of the Mini:
http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1368673206.jpg |
Said it before, and I'll say it again....peanut butter, let it soak on and wipe off
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Straighten up and fly right, Denis...or, use simple kerosene :rolleyes: (I'm originally from the midwest - kerosene removes road tar and sap, Coca Cola removes rust from chrome). Cheers, David |
Plain old rubbing alcohol does the trick.
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Searched it and it seems like rubbing alcohol is the winner.
Pine sap removal? | Mercedes-Benz Club of America |
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That's all I use at the shop. It may take a couple of attempts but it works. Flip the rag often so you don't spread the sap. |
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Thanks!! Rubbing alcohol it will be, especially since I actually have some a few feet away. I'll post results later in the day.
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Alcohol is excellent, of course. And on a cool day such as today, it will work fine. The prepackaged stuff for this has other less volatile compounds to increase working time. Time is what you need, the sap does not tend to dissolve instantly.
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