Cleaning the Load Bay

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Jimbo54

New Member
Posts
1
Location
Beaconsfield, UK
I occasionally use my LR Defender off-road, in the forest, carting firewood. Just recently, I felled a Japanese Larch, a horrible alien species in my Beech forest, and cut it up for firewood. I carted it home, only to find the logs had leaked resin all over the load area. I now have a sticky mess in the back. I tried the pressure washer, but that didn't touch it. I tried wiping it off, removing the excess mechanically, then going at it with cloths soaked in white spirit, then when desperation got the better of me, soaked in petrol. No good, I've still got a sticky load bay (and that's no euphamism!).
Has anyone found a way of removing resin that doesn't involve localised nuclear holocaust?
Cheers
Jim
 
I occasionally use my LR Defender off-road, in the forest, carting firewood. Just recently, I felled a Japanese Larch, a horrible alien species in my Beech forest, and cut it up for firewood. I carted it home, only to find the logs had leaked resin all over the load area. I now have a sticky mess in the back. I tried the pressure washer, but that didn't touch it. I tried wiping it off, removing the excess mechanically, then going at it with cloths soaked in white spirit, then when desperation got the better of me, soaked in petrol. No good, I've still got a sticky load bay (and that's no euphamism!).
Has anyone found a way of removing resin that doesn't involve localised nuclear holocaust?
Cheers
Jim

I thought white sprit would be the thing as it is near enough distilled pine resin, but if that doesn't work, have you thought of thickening it so it can be scraped up, like old cooking oil with bicarb. ?
 
I occasionally use my LR Defender off-road, in the forest, carting firewood. Just recently, I felled a Japanese Larch, a horrible alien species in my Beech forest, and cut it up for firewood. I carted it home, only to find the logs had leaked resin all over the load area. I now have a sticky mess in the back. I tried the pressure washer, but that didn't touch it. I tried wiping it off, removing the excess mechanically, then going at it with cloths soaked in white spirit, then when desperation got the better of me, soaked in petrol. No good, I've still got a sticky load bay (and that's no euphamism!).
Has anyone found a way of removing resin that doesn't involve localised nuclear holocaust?
Cheers
Jim

A friend who I just mentioned this to, said try olive oil, (I'd ask popeye first too) ...
 
I occasionally use my LR Defender off-road, in the forest, carting firewood. Just recently, I felled a Japanese Larch, a horrible alien species in my Beech forest, and cut it up for firewood. I carted it home, only to find the logs had leaked resin all over the load area. I now have a sticky mess in the back. I tried the pressure washer, but that didn't touch it. I tried wiping it off, removing the excess mechanically, then going at it with cloths soaked in white spirit, then when desperation got the better of me, soaked in petrol. No good, I've still got a sticky load bay (and that's no euphamism!).
Has anyone found a way of removing resin that doesn't involve localised nuclear holocaust?
Cheers
Jim

I use a lot of resin/grp products the only thing I can think of is try using acetone, soak on a rag
then leave it on for a min to break down the resin, wear gloves its not very good for your
skin & dont breath in the fumes.
 
+1 for acetone, and it might help to pre-heat the resin residue with heat gun beforehand. Future note, whenever I lug loads in the back I cover the load area with two old double sleeping bags and a folded tarpaulin. This zero risks any sticky crud and scratches - the tarpaulin has a clean side and a dirty side.
 
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