How to Get Super Glue Off a Car
Many cars now come with the option to have super protective
coatings applied, often called clear coats and "bras".
These are a great help in keeping such things as acidic bird droppings and rock
chips from damaging your car's exterior paint job. But when someone spills Super Glue on it, that's a much stickier
situation.
We wish this was good news and bad news, but there is no good news to Super Glue and painted surfaces. The basic
ingredient in most removers for Super Glue and Crazy Glue, is acetone.
This chemical is also found in nail polish, which is highly popular for removing
little drips and drabs around the home, as long as they are on skin, wood, glass, and surfaces that aren't going to
be stained or leached of their color.
Acetone can even be used on a finished table or cupboard top, but chances are, it will damage the shine/finish, and
should always be tested on a hidden area, first.
There really is no safe way to get this kind of bonding material off the painted metal surface of a car, without
removing an area of paint.
The one method you can try, which is by no means guaranteed, is also used on
skin and that's a combination of heavy hand cream, with some powdered or liquid soap. First, soak the spill with
warm water by laying a dripping rag on it.
Then take a cloth, dip it in your mixture, and apply it to the glue and rub. The
combination of grease and sliding of the petroleum ingredients in soap, can ease glue off skin, but on a car, given
that the glue is bonded to the paint and not a permanent surface, you may be able to shift the glue, but it will
take the paint off with it.
How to Remove Super Glue - Back Home
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