---------------------------------------------------------- Tailwind-List Digest Archive --- Total Messages Posted Mon 03/28/05: 4 ---------------------------------------------------------- Today's Message Index: ---------------------- 1. 05:13 AM - liquid gloves (Paul Holmes) 2. 09:51 AM - Re: liquid gloves (Eric Schlanser) 3. 12:53 PM - Re: liquid gloves (ROBERT MATTESON) 4. 04:22 PM - Re: liquid gloves (Stephen Doughty) ________________________________ Message 1 _____________________________________ Time: 05:13:36 AM PST US From: "Paul Holmes" Subject: Tailwind-List: liquid gloves Are any of the liquid glove products ok for epoxy, MEK and paint? The light weight gloves i've used melt. Paul pholmes@wmis.net ________________________________ Message 2 _____________________________________ Time: 09:51:58 AM PST US s=s1024; d=yahoo.com; b=CifrVSV8QfrG2XjtsobWmew2QyD92gHrUdIFemBWcRrA98/n2CWoAjSZJ2MlnOOmMhDuoRuyOneVv1fUAsH6fImhPkDGAtkqNXk8HqrCqIkwypaVI2mOysGve460c7zT4yu9DmKMkyf/TpW2h086mCdI0IO/Gi3gXc7jtW9hdho= ; From: Eric Schlanser Subject: Re: Tailwind-List: liquid gloves Nitrile rubber disposable gloves are chemical resistant and hold up quite well to epoxy and other chemicals. Unfortuately, they are most expensive. Vinyl disposable gloves are my second choice and are much cheaper. Latex rubber gloves are the lease durable. I don't know much about the liquid or cream products. I have tried Elmers liquid gloves but I do not trust it alone. I use it in combination with disposable gloves. Health science studies show that none of the disposable gloves are 100% effective due to tiny pinhole leaks. A combination is effective. Double gloves are also effective. Good luck, Eric Schlanser - AZO Paul Holmes wrote: Are any of the liquid glove products ok for epoxy, MEK and paint? The light weight gloves i've used melt. Paul pholmes@wmis.net ________________________________ Message 3 _____________________________________ Time: 12:53:05 PM PST US From: "ROBERT MATTESON" Subject: Re: Tailwind-List: liquid gloves Food service gloves, the type they use in restaurants, are much more resistant to MEK and paint than any other glove I've tried. Don't know about epoxy. They last for hours and they're cheap but they aren't very form fitting and not real comfortable, but they work. They are the ones that come in a flat cardboard box and feel like tissue paper. The ones I've used are from Sexton food services. ----- Original Message ----- From: Paul Holmes To: Tailwind List Sent: Monday, March 28, 2005 8:12 AM Subject: Tailwind-List: liquid gloves Are any of the liquid glove products ok for epoxy, MEK and paint? The light weight gloves i've used melt. Paul pholmes@wmis.net ________________________________ Message 4 _____________________________________ Time: 04:22:07 PM PST US From: "Stephen Doughty" Subject: Re: Tailwind-List: liquid gloves --> Tailwind-List message posted by: "Stephen Doughty" Hey Eric! I finally got to fly again last Sat. Are you ready to go to brunch again? Steve -in Michigan >From: Eric Schlanser >Reply-To: tailwind-list@matronics.com >To: tailwind-list@matronics.com >Subject: Re: Tailwind-List: liquid gloves >Date: Mon, 28 Mar 2005 09:51:31 -0800 (PST) > >Nitrile rubber disposable gloves are chemical resistant and hold up quite >well to epoxy and other chemicals. Unfortuately, they are most expensive. > >Vinyl disposable gloves are my second choice and are much cheaper. > >Latex rubber gloves are the lease durable. > >I don't know much about the liquid or cream products. I have tried Elmers >liquid gloves but I do not trust it alone. I use it in combination with >disposable gloves. > >Health science studies show that none of the disposable gloves are 100% >effective due to tiny pinhole leaks. A combination is effective. Double >gloves are also effective. > >Good luck, Eric Schlanser - AZO > >Paul Holmes wrote: >Are any of the liquid glove products ok for epoxy, MEK and paint? The light >weight gloves i've used melt. >Paul >pholmes@wmis.net > >__________________________________________________