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• #117127
What’s the best way to remove rust stains from a white T-shirt?
Traditionally, oxalic acid. In modern times now that clothes are so cheap, I think @WillMelling is on the right track unless it's an unusually valuable t-shirt
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• #117128
Buy some decent azo dye that matches.
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• #117129
Toothpaste.
Bit of water to work it in.
Don't try to rub it, it'll mess up the cotton.
Rinse and repeat.
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• #117130
Boot polish. Rub it in thoroughly.
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• #117131
I think the Cloudflare protection that bossman uses as the 'front door' to the site blocks known bad IPs. Sadly, it's not smart enough to distinguish individual bad actors from large public networks used by bad actors. Thus, all access from some public WiFi services is blocked.
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• #117132
You would be suprised how well sunlight will bleach stains out of white cloth too
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• #117133
Is everyone just ignoring Will’s stated preference for not tagging them?
Why? -
• #117134
I see! Thanks for that.
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• #117135
I want to rent a villa, golf me, if I use a credit card to pay: what am I protected against ?
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• #117136
The supplier going bust or the villa not being as described - assuming you spend between £100 and £30000 on the card. You aren't covered under section 75 if you go through an intermediary though, eg if you book your villa through booking.com and not direct with the villa owner.
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• #117137
But you can't dissociate ferric oxide with UV until you get to a power level where the shirt would be vapourised before the stain was touched 🙂
UV is good (or bad, if you don't want things to fade) for breaking up colourful organics into colourless fragments, but useless against most inorganic salts
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• #117138
I have booked direct with owners many times. The only time there was a minor issue was when they sold the villa (we had booked about 9 months prior) they refunded all of the money paid and apologised for the inconvenience.
All of mine were either word of mouth or I had booked previously through Airbnb etc and subsequently went direct. -
• #117140
Umami strain removal?
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• #117141
In catching up on past achievements, I remembered to respond to you again.
Thanks, it worked a treat.
Ended up having to make a paste off the pellets because the solution wasn't strong enough, apply liberally with brush and have that fizz the anodising away over a couple of hours. Satisfying.
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• #117142
The crankarms are now much more shiny due to polishing effect of toe straps.
But yeah, thanks again for the tips! -
• #117143
It used to look like this:
1 Attachment
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• #117144
This would perfectly! Thank you. I had tried some stain remover before the lemon juice/sea salt and it didn’t do much.
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• #117145
Enduro or NTN are what I am about to replace mine with
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• #117146
London-based place to re anodize chainrings?
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• #117147
How London? http://www.metroplating.co.uk/ serves the capital from just within the London Borough of Hillingdon
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• #117148
I've broken a key off in a lock. What are my options?
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• #117149
This fucking day!
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• #117150
What type of lock? If it’s like a Yale lock on a door, you can try press in a flat head screwdriver to turn and unlock it. I managed to do this once, but replaced the lock as I couldn’t be bothered trying to get the broken key part out.
Edit - ah I couldn’t see that photo a minute ago. The right sized flat head screwdriver might work here
Rub in some lemon juice, breadcrumbs and salt, leave to soak in warm water for 60 minutes. That should give you time to pop out to Primark to buy a new t-shirt. Throw away the old one on your return.