That really depends on the type of finish and the type of rubber involved. You could try a gentle cleaning with some naphtha. Also try some goof off or goof off 2. If those dont remove the rubber you might have to get it refinished. You could also lightly scrub with some 0000 steel wool and naphtha.
Rubber casters are found under furniture so that the furniture does not easily slide around. They may also stop the furniture from scratching up the floor.
To remove rubber padding that has adhered to a hardwood floor, use a very thin wallpaper scraper, proceed slowly and finish by lightly sanding the area. The finish of the floor has most likely been dissolved by contact with the runner padding, so the finish will need to be renewed.
you don't
try spray on rubber
You can repair small punctures with PVC cement, but the results will not be optimal. To repair a tire (inner tube), you need a solvent that will disolve a bit of the top layer of the rubber tube and the bottom layer of the patch. Then, as the solvent dries, the two, together with the added rubber in the rubber cement, become one. this gives a strong, flexible, air tight seal. The solvents in PVC cement fill the bill for disolving the rubber. But instead of a flexible rubber base, it's relatively inflexible PVC. Your repair will be air tight, but far less flexible than it would be with rubber cement. This may, in the long term, lead to stress failure at the edge of your patch.
The most durable material for outdoor furniture is usually a hard rubber material.
Yes. A pitcher must make contact with the rubber but it may be a toe, a heel, or the entire foot.
Rubber wood comes from the rubber tree, specifically from the Para rubber tree (Hevea brasiliensis). After the rubber tree's latex production declines, the tree is harvested for its wood, which is durable and commonly used in furniture manufacturing.
To get a tank, you must finish Burnin' Rubber 3. (I ask question but I answer it myself :D )
Soak it in boiling water for 1 minute and use a plier to hold the rubber
Rubberwood comes from the Rubber Tree (Hevea brasiliensis) which is the same tree which we get Natural Rubber or Latex from. You may be able to purchase the item without a reaction, but each time you or your child come in contact with the item it would be considered an exposure which over time can increase Latex Sensitivity/Allergy.
I would try rubber solution as used to repair bicycle tires. -Available in bike stores.