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Mineral spirits residue - petertay15 - 12-03-2015

The top of a teacart has been stripped using citrus stripper. The label says clean it up with a stiff brush and mineral spirits. Lumber yard guy says don't use mineral spirits at it leaves an oil residue. He promotes alcohol. Opinions and experience appreciated. -- Peter


Re: Mineral spirits residue - K. L. McReynolds - 12-03-2015

Depends on the finish that will be used. If I were doing that cleanup, I'd use paint thinner or mineral spirits---the real oil based kind, not the eco friendly stuff.

Then use alcohol.

Reason? The spirits dissolve stuff alcohol does not dissolve as well. The alcohol will remove the spirits residue.

I always get good finish results by using the base liquid for the finish I will use just before applying the finish(let it dry first, however).


Re: Mineral spirits residue - Joe Connors - 12-03-2015

petertay15 said:


The top of a teacart has been stripped using citrus stripper. The label says clean it up with a stiff brush and mineral spirits. Lumber yard guy says don't use mineral spirits at it leaves an oil residue. He promotes alcohol. Opinions and experience appreciated. -- Peter




Do the cleanup per the instructions from Citrus Strip, then a final wipe down with lacquer thinner or acetone to remove any residue.


Re: Mineral spirits residue - Admiral - 12-03-2015

Joe Connors said:


Do the cleanup per the instructions from Citrus Strip, then a final wipe down with lacquer thinner or acetone to remove any residue.




^^^^^^^This


Re: Mineral spirits residue - Robert Adams - 12-03-2015

Same here, lacquer thinner is my solvent of choice for cleaning all kinds of stuff. Mineral spirits does leave a residue behind. Think of it as a cleaner version of diese/kerosene. Basically a lighter oil.


Re: Mineral spirits residue - AgGEM - 12-03-2015

Robert Adams said:


Same here, lacquer thinner is my solvent of choice for cleaning all kinds of stuff. Mineral spirits does leave a residue behind. Think of it as a cleaner version of diese/kerosene. Basically a lighter oil.




Me too. LT or Acetone.
Ag


Re: Mineral spirits residue - Restorer - 12-03-2015

crap I just read that in the hundreds of pieces I've refinished I have been doing it wrong. I use mineral spirits for clean up and have never had a single problem. I use it after using keen strip premium stripper, I use mineral spirits for a final wipe down before finishing, and I use it to wipe the dust off after sanding between coats. I have never had a single problem with ms using it this way. I doubt I will change a thing.


Re: Mineral spirits residue - MichaelMouse - 12-04-2015

petertay15 said:


The top of a teacart has been stripped using citrus stripper. The label says clean it up with a stiff brush and mineral spirits. Lumber yard guy says don't use mineral spirits at it leaves an oil residue. He promotes alcohol. Opinions and experience appreciated. -- Peter




Interestingly enough, the main ingredient, by percentage, is used as a solvent for petroleum-based products. MS are petroleum-base (nonpolar) liquids.

It is miscible with water, and therefore, presumably, with (semipolar) alcohol.

That said, almost any finish wants an oil-free substrate, which would dictate MS. Probably why the manufacturer recommends it.


Re: Mineral spirits residue - Herb G - 12-04-2015

Naphtha works wonders. And it evaporates entirely too.


Re: Mineral spirits residue - Steve N - 12-04-2015

petertay15 said:


The top of a teacart has been stripped using citrus stripper. The label says clean it up with a stiff brush and mineral spirits. Lumber yard guy says don't use mineral spirits at it leaves an oil residue. He promotes alcohol. Opinions and experience appreciated. -- Peter




I guess I am left wondering if your concern about "this residue" is one that will affect your finish, or your health?

For health it's a much higher refined form of mineral oil, which we generally suggest you saturate a cutting board with, maybe with some parafin wax added.

Wow as a finish, you'll have to get through the chemical makeup of everything mentioned in this thread, and see if they don't all start life as some form of petro chemical.


Anyhow here is what Bob Flexner says about all those liquids we use I would dare say he is considered to be smarter than the average Big Box employee on these matters. He is giving this or that, however those who have gotten it wrong haven't had terrible outcomes, and I dare say many have probably been impressed enough with the outcomes to repeatedly make the same mistakes over and over