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Cleaning Masking tape residue

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If you can't let the residue soak in naptha/lighter fluid, you may be reduced to scraping carefully. If you use a hard plastic scraper (like the edge of a credit card) you'll have the best combination of straight/sharp edge to break up and lift the residue, and soft enough material to minimize the risk of scratching whatever the tape was stuck on.
 
Does "Goo Gone" work for people?
 
Does "Goo Gone" work for people?

Is that a fancy version of so-called glue remover? I was going to suggest the remover because it will rather surely work fine and leave no residue nor would it damage anything (still test it before going wild).

They used to make one with orange scent, worked great, and smelled good enough too.
 

This reference does not work.

Edit: See below
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Gooo Gone - That's similar to what I used some years back, and it is citrus scented too 😀
 
Not 100% sure about your masking tape,

Maybe you are right? I use beige and black masking tape for so many things in darkroom, I should start buying just 3M brand of it.

Thank you Matt, Donald, Bernard and others!
Scraping can be challenging when surface paint is not glossy but more cracked.
Matt, in London Drugs, GooGone is even cheaper than on Amazon. Will report back my findings
 
I'm not sure how different GooGone is from naphtha (aside from the citrus scent), but it's worth a try.
You could also try acetone.

As mentioned above, you could also soak it. Try saturating a piece of paper towel or cotton ball with whatever you are using, and let it sit for a while, then gently scrape or rub. Repeat if it seems to work a little.

Sometimes I'll use an eraser to try to rub off residue, but you need to be careful of what you are removing it from - you don't want to mess anything up.
 
I'd avoid acetone; it's much more likely to damage plastics or paint, or to decolor dyed leather, than naphtha or derivatives thereof.
 
In my experience, lighter fluid followed by alcohol works great.

I believe lighter fluid is naptha. When I smoked, I used a Zippo lighter and was in love with the smell of the lighter when I snapped it open.
 
Goo Gone is made from citrus oil. I've never had it injure plastic, unlike acetone. Lighter fluid/naptha also seems plastic safe. TTBOMK, "white gas" (AKA Coleman Fuel) is naptha, but probably less pure than lighter fluid. Lighter fluid seems to leave no residue - a good feature for when a leaky Zippo seeps all over your suit.
 
When I smoked, I used a Zippo lighter and was in love with the smell of the lighter when I snapped it open.

Same here.

The easiest way to treat masking tape residue is find a marker of the desired colour and colour it.

Goo Gone, in my experience, is not good - it will eat away a significant number of finishes.
 
Goo Gone, in my experience, is not good - it will eat away a significant number of finishes.

That'll be the d-Limonene and ether-based ingredients. Ether is an aggressive solvent for organics, and limonene eats almost anything. Goo Gone is great on natural fiber fabric, enamel based paints, most kinds of rubber, and real leather -- none of which are commonly seen on cameras. Naptha will attack uncured oil based paints, as will mineral spirits (aka neutral spirits) -- but so will anything else that has any chance of softening the latex-based adhesive from masking tape.
 
Ether is an aggressive solvent for organics, and limonene eats almost anything.

It would also essentially destroy any shellac-based finish or any kind of compressed-paper fake leather you'd find on older cameras.
 
What Are the Ingredients in Goo Gone?
  • Petroleum distillates.
  • ...
Hmm, I guess I won't use it to flavor orange cake icing after all.

The stuff dissolves styrene plastics, at a guess - keep it away from plastic airplane models. I have never had any problem with the stuff and other plastics, famous last words, I know.
 
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Goo Gone, in my experience, is not good - it will eat away a significant number of finishes.

I've not used it on all kinds of surfaces, but on those I have, never had an issue. But Goo Gone disclaimer is of course there to cover their end.
 
The stuff dissolves styrene plastics, at a guess

It certainly softens the polystyrene that's used for plastic models -- enough to make a mess of it if you try to use it to clean that plastic. The Goo Gone bottle, IIRC, contains a warning to test on an inconspicuous area before using on plastics or synthetic fabric.
 
I’ve had good luck with De-Solv-It Pro Contractors Solvent. It a citrus based product that I originally bought from a video supply house who sold it as a VHS cassette label remover. Now Ace Hardware sells it so it’s pretty easy to find. With dried on masking tape residue you need to apply it a few times and let it soak between applications. Patience the key.

Roger
 
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