NavList:
A Community Devoted to the Preservation and Practice of Celestial Navigation and Other Methods of Traditional Wayfinding
Re: on washing sextants
From: Jared Sherman
Date: 2004 Aug 3, 13:37 -0400
From: Jared Sherman
Date: 2004 Aug 3, 13:37 -0400
Armorall seems to be a good way to protect rubber. I've used it on some seals and parts that are 19 years old and still pass for new. It is supposed to replace the volatile compounds that slowly evaporate, which keep flexible plastics (and rubber) rubbery. It can be problematic, i.e. there are reports it will eventually "slip" the bonds of some glued seams in plastics, render plastic fascia unpaintable (the paint eventually lifts off) and so on. But, it does preserve plastics and rubber nicely. Key word: use sparingly, if you think you've just used enough, you've used too much. It also will ensure that the eye cup smears any glasses you may wear.The old tech way to keep rubber soft is plain talc, talcum powder. "Unscented" baby powder, since there's no telling what is in the scent, or the least expensive talcum powder in the drug store. The light dusting of talc seals the surface of the rubber and prevents oxidation. That's what we used pre-armorall, and it worked very nicely too. Personally, I used the Armorall. Sparingly. Then wiped with a clean dry cloth, to remove the "just enough" and just let the rest soak in. Shouldn't be necessary more than ??twice?? 3x? a year? Probably using a mild cleaner from time to time, some soapy water or eyeglass cleaner, etc. to remove body oils from the eyecup would do more to preserve it, than anything else.