warm up the pipes some to soften the nylon and scrub off with green pads they use for washing dishes then polish with a chrome cleaner good luck
Yes
this was my question and I scraped the residue off with a razor blade
toothbrush, warm water, mild soap if needed
Use soap and water to clean whitewall tires. Also use a nylon or plastic brush to scrub the tires while you clean it.
This site had some good info:http://www.hartmann.com/shop/faq_care.asp
Actually, the owner's manual says NOT to clean it. If you have an excessive buildup of carbon/ bullet lube, use a spray gun cleaner such as Gun Scrubber (wear safety glasses). The Nylon 66 is considered self lubricating.
Silk is a protein fiber and usually burns readily, not necessarily with a steady flame, and smells like burning hair. The ash is easily crumbled. Silk samples are not as easily extinguished as cotton or linen. Nylon is a polyamide made from petroleum. Nylon melts and then burns rapidly if the flame remains on the melted fiber. If you can keep the flame on the melting nylon, it smells like burning plastic.
used in shoes used in ropes and using it to clean sink and household items
To clean mold off a moon bounce, you would need vinegar, nylon scrub brush and cleaning rags. The rags can be soaked in the vinegar and then scrub down the moon bounce. If the mold doesn't come clean right away, the nylon scrub brush can be used for extra cleaning power.
Getting a paton or nylon is the best material,which is easy to clean and maintain.
Any brand of firearms cleaning solvent will do the job.
In the late 1920s and the early 1930s, chemists at the DuPont Company first produced nylon by combining chemicals they extracted from coal, water, air, petroleum, natural gas, and agricultural by-products. The thousands of nylon products on the market today all begin essentially the same. Nylon factories combine the chemicals that produce nylon, heating them first to remove the water. The small molecules from each chemical combine during this heating to form very large molecules in a process called polymerization.The nylon then comes out of this heating machine in a flat ribbon. As this ribbon cools, it hardens. Then it is cut into pieces, which are then sent to factories where they are melted and used to make the thousands of different products, including parachutes, stockings, tires, carpets, gears, machine parts, bearings, and furniture, and hair brushes.Nylon threads, used for fabrics, fishing lines, and surgical threads, are made when the melted nylon is forced through tiny holes of a machine. These threads harden when they hit the air.