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Paul,
Not surprisingly, I know all about it. I would not get it anywhere =
near a piano. It is famous for migrating away from where you put it, one =
good reason not to use it. I think it's got a lot of teflon in it, but =
it seems to stay in a fairly liquid state, which is good for some =
things, but not for pianos, I would think.
----- Original Message -----=20
From: Paul=20
To: pianotech@ptg.org=20
Sent: Monday, November 05, 2001 10:23 PM
Subject: Break Free CLP
List
Does anyone recognize the name and specifically the properties of a =
Product called "Break Free CLP," "an Armor Holdings Company." CLP =
meaning cleaner/lubricant/preservative. After that it states: =
MIL-L-63460 NATO CODE S-758 9150-01-079-6124
The back label states it as safe on guns, tackle, homes, auto, bikes, =
industrial equipment. Made by Break Free Inc. Jacksonville, Florida. Is =
this stuff the same or similar to Protek? Anyone try it in pianos? The =
bottle comes with a long thin (4")applicator tube that mounts in a tight =
fitting hole in the top, vertically, and the liquid is dispensed by =
squeezing the bottle. I found it at a Gun Shop. They like it because it =
cleans and lubricates and does not attract dust.
Paul Chick
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