KEITH MYERS
New member
As we all know after time,Pandas start looking a little grungy from our grubby hands. What it the best way to clean them without having to bead blast them?
i saw a documentry on pandas on discovery channel and it looked like they used a thing that looked like a broom, with a bucket of foamy water to give them a bath. I dont know much about them, but i,m sure that if you tried to sand blast a panda, it woud stop eating bamboo and try to eat you.
As we all know after time,Pandas start looking a little grungy from our grubby hands. What it the best way to clean them without having to bead blast them?
I saw a documentry on Pandas on Discovery channel and it looked like they used a thing that looked like a broom, with a bucket of foamy water to give them a bath. I dont know much about them, but I,m sure that if you tried to sand blast a Panda, it woud stop eating bamboo and try to eat you.
I P______D my pants laughing at this.
I really don't know why you would want to kill a Panda but to each his own.
First you get a really sharp gutting and skinning knife. Then find a place that you can hang the poor little Panda from to bleed out.
Next get a large plastic bag to collect the offal.........
oh.....say.....do what ?????
Oh !!!! It's not that kind of Panda....oops ......sorry......
Are panda actions anodised?
If they are, you don't want to use any abrasive.
You also need to avoid anything with strong alkalis in it (like washing soda, sodium hydroxide, bleech and floor cleaning detergents) as both alkalis and acids will eat aluminium.
I'd try alcahol, kerosene (the low odour stuff is a lot less obnoxious than home heating oil) or a mild detergent in warm water first, and an old toothbrush for any scrubbing.
You still talking about the bamboo eaters or the Stolle thing?Simplegreen and a toothbrush, works perfectly.