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Removing gasket from 7JP4 on Motorola
I know this might have been discussed before but I couldn't find the topic. How and what do you use to remove the melted gasket on a 7JP4 in a Motorola VT-71?
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Warm water wil dissolve it. Be patient
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Maybe you could use an old dishpan or soup pot and fill it with warm water and just put the CRT face down. I know it will float, therefore the reason for a deep pan. Just a thought... |
I recall years ago thinking that various organic solvents like acetone or alchohol should be the obvious choice. But when acetone basically didn't work at all, and alcohol showed only a slight tendency to dissolve the stuff, water was the next logical choice, and worked far better. So water is indeed the answer to this question.
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Thanks guy's! I will give it a try.
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Twice I've used a hairdryer to get most of it off and then solvent to get the rest. Fellow collectors saw it as a dangerous way to do it, but both times I didn't have any trouble. I tried water and just didn't have the patience. My way took maybe an hour.
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Definitely use warm water. Let it sit 10-15 minutes and most will just fall off. Use a razor blade to scrape off any stubborn pieces left. It's pretty cool when you have a nice shiny CRT when you're done!
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I agree that some scraping with a razor blade or similar speeds up the process a ton. With warm water and an appropriate tool (don't knick the glass!), probably 10-15 minutes of work will do the job.
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Be sure to wear some good eye/face/body protection, I hear these tubes implode far more violently than something like a 10BP4.
I've handled a lot of them with no problems, but there's always a first time. |
The bulb on the 7JP4 is much thinner than the 10BP4. More susceptible to impact.
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It was very slow when I did it, you have to keep soaking it then scrubbing or scraping until it's gone. Probably depends somewhat on how petrified the gunk is.
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My experience was the same as Tom....Tried all sorts of solvents, and eventually found that warm water and a drop of detergent took it right off. I chose to chip off the petrified bits with my fingernails, but I didn't have much to scrape off.
I wonder if they used more than one material to make the gaskets... |
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