Acetone doesn't attack glass.
Acetone evaporates on its own very quickly and will naturally leave a deposit of residue.æ Do not put acetone in a plastic container use glass, and if you need it to evaporate faster you can, very carefully, heat it slightly.
No. You need to uses acetone. It is a solvent for that type of glue. You can also use a razor blade on glass.
Glass is best. Metal containers are o.k and some but not all solvent resistant plastics.
No, because when you add acetone to acetone, all you are doing is adding more of the volume of acetone to acetone. You are just changing the amount of acetone, not anything chemically happening.
Acetone molecules evaporate when you add heat to a beaker of liquid acetone.
Use acetone. If you don't have acetone, use nail polish remover. It has acetone in it.
Depends on the type of pipes as many acid systems do allow for acetone
No it does not. Acetone is the only thing to worry about.
Acetone or lacquer thinner should do it.
Wipe with acetone or lacquer thinner, then Windex.
Acetone evaporates on its own very quickly and will naturally leave a deposit of residue.æ Do not put acetone in a plastic container use glass, and if you need it to evaporate faster you can, very carefully, heat it slightly.
yes
No. You need to uses acetone. It is a solvent for that type of glue. You can also use a razor blade on glass.
Its fake glass.
Lay it upside down and rub it firmly with acetone on a rough rag.
The term "fiberglass" is used for a variety of materials, and it's possible that your particular fiberglass object uses a matrix material that's soluble in acetone. It would be best to ask the manufacturer.
lots