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#1
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Water. It isn't chemical warfare, put everything else away. Unless your tap water is hard or has lots of minerals it should be fine. Store bought water would be a waste of money and effort. Cool water and patience... I'd stay away from warm or hot water if there's ink from a pen on the card.
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#2
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never use bleach on T206 cards. it actually degrades the paper fiber more than if you were to use alcohol or lighter fluid for instance. You may also fade the ink using bleach.
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#3
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Great news I got all the paper off the Brown. It actually soaked quite well. I used warm water and let him take a bath. I have a neat little tool with a rounded square tip (oxymoron
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#4
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Let's see some before & after pics please, Andrew!
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#5
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I will get pics when I get back tomorrow night.
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#6
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probably a dumb question, but did you pull the paper off while the card was still wet?
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#7
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Andrew,
I've never soaked a card before but have some I'd like to. Just curious, how long you soaked the cards for & did you need to soak multiple times? Last edited by brob28; 02-27-2011 at 06:27 PM. |
#8
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Guys, thank you for all the advice. I'm going to start with a 61 Koufax that has tape residue down the left and right borders. It's not in great condition anyway, so no real risk of trashing a high dollar card. If my results are worthwhile I'll share some pics. Thanks again for all the great information shared on this awesome site.
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#9
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Bill I wouldn't soak a Topps card. I wouldn't think they would do very well in water. Try a t206 beater if you are looking to do a test run.
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#10
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A 1961 Topps will not soak. The card will separate apart. Don't soak it.
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#11
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Bill, you are not going to have success soaking in water to get rid of a tape stain. Water is a solvent, but not everything is soluble in water--tape adhesive is generally not water soluble...there are other solvents out there that may result in a decent removal of tape adhesive and/or residue but I don't know that you will have much success if the card itself is stained from the adhesive.
Soaking starts getting much trickier when you start looking at 1930/40's to the present. With the introduction of industrial adhesives you will begin to have much less luck with simple water soaking. For example if anything is put in with rubber cement soaking will not do you any good. -Rhett
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