Pine sap on an outdoor cedar bench, Is at hand anything that will remove this?
Answers: GooGone will work on fairly fresh sap. For sap that have "cured" a bit, you will need something stronger. Oops All Purpose Remover is rather a bit stronger, it will remove any sap although you may have to apply a few times and consent to it set. It is available at Walmart and many other places beside a paint sundries department.
If you want something a bit stronger, lighter fluid is a good subsequent try.
Stronger still, Toulene or Xylene. Both of those are a bit harder to find, rather horrid. Try a decent paint store, sometimes automotive stores will enjoy one or both. Be careful near these.
Denatured alcohol falls in near somewhere as well. Probably in the order of as good as lighter fluid. If you want a lot, that might be the passageway to go.
Any of these things will loosen the sap up. The stronger ones will work a bit quicker but you may enjoy to soak a bit with any of them. Sap is if truth be told pretty resistant when cured.
try turpentine or OOPS
Boiling water, but exam it on a spot first. It will melt the sap and afterwards you can gently steel wool it sour.
Use a product called Goo Be Gone from Walmart. Works great: I hold 5 white pines about 60 foot tall, pine asphalt all over.
This product works.
Try Pam cooking spray. I get pine sap on my hands awhile put a bet on and used the cooking spray. It did bring it off. You might enjoy to give it a couple sprays.
When I be a kid and I'd get pine sap on my hand from playing outside, I'd use hairspray to get it sour my hands. It might work on your bench.
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