
miroslav
Cosmic Cowboy
You may not see it with every pinch roller...but most chemicals tend to react with the rubber in some bad way.
I can recall learning about the "no-alcohol on pinch rollers from as far back as the mid-'70s.
Check out the info on Terry's site: Terry's Rubber Pinch Rollers & Wheels
All he does is re-manufacture rubber rollers....and this is his view:
I've since gone to cleaning with just water...and it was kinda' funny seeing how well it works...the rubber is clean and it gest back that nice, tacky feel like when it was new and fresh. I guess if you have some real nasty gunk, then add a little dish soap and rinse with water...but so far I've just used warm water.
I can recall learning about the "no-alcohol on pinch rollers from as far back as the mid-'70s.
Check out the info on Terry's site: Terry's Rubber Pinch Rollers & Wheels
All he does is re-manufacture rubber rollers....and this is his view:
Many people ask me what to clean their pinch rollers with. I wish I had a good super secret formula I used and could tell you about, but I don't. I see daily and heard what chemicals do to rubber, and it isn't good. Sooner or later the rubber will be ruined. Some types of rubber dry out, crack, and get hard, while others get soft and gooey.
My advice and its only my opinion, and I know this doesn't clean as good as some high octane chemical, but I suggest just plain old dish soap and water, then rinse good.
Sorry thats about it.
I've since gone to cleaning with just water...and it was kinda' funny seeing how well it works...the rubber is clean and it gest back that nice, tacky feel like when it was new and fresh. I guess if you have some real nasty gunk, then add a little dish soap and rinse with water...but so far I've just used warm water.