Added: 8 months ago
From: opplevelse
Views: 1,654
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  • yeah tycho!!

  • cheers buddy huge help.. the amount i have on my walls is going to take a couple of days to get rid of anyway xD

  • @U235Videos every time you re post spam messages you make the world a worse place.....

  • that's not the wd40 its the friction cause by excessive rubbing by the cloth you don't need wd40 I have removed my blue/white tack with just constant rubbing with the side of my thumb also try if it is dry blue/white tack putting some fresh tack on-top then rub away with your thumb or a cloth (but not a cloth with ebrased part otherwise this will remove some paint as well)

  • @lilhigsbill Hi! The WD40 actually dissolves the bluetac, which makes it much easier to remove. I had tried rubbing it, but unfortunately it was old and would not come off ... or if it did it removed some of the paint. The WD40 disolves the bluetac so that all you end up with is a light blue smudge on the paper towel and nothing at all on the wall.

    Try it yourself! Just spray it on to a thin smudge of blutac, dont do any rubbing and watch the blutac dissolve away over a few minutes :)

  • I didn't really get an oily stain but perhaps try sugar soap or some other detergent?

  • @opplevelse tried sugar soap, it didn't work :(

  • how can you get rid of the oily stain that remains? thanks!

  • @raindiction I didn't really get an oily stain but perhaps try sugar soap or some other detergent?

  • @raindiction paint?

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