Has anybody done it and if so, how? Have a helmet photomatched and the sticker says issued anyway and put in a stupid spot. Photomatch is worth more than an issued sticker.
Removing an MLB auth sticker from batting helmet
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Re: Removing an MLB auth sticker from batting helmet
Alcohol should work without melting the plastic. -
Re: Removing an MLB auth sticker from batting helmet
Have you guys tried these methods? I have Goof Off and that works well for residue. I assume alcholhol would too.Comment
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Re: Removing an MLB auth sticker from batting helmet
Is it over tar or just the plastic of the helmet? I've taken a damaged holo off a bat and it just left the small bits which sort of rubbed off under my finger. It didn't need anything for cleanup like Goo Gone, etc. I'd be afraid of what that might do on glossy plastic like a helmet (and obviously you can't use it over tar) . . . I'd just pull it off and see what you're left with before you start putting cleaners on it.
Side note: I also removed a damaged one from a 2002 baseball. The residue stains the baseballs in the shape of the holo. Really annoying; looks terrible.Comment
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Re: Removing an MLB auth sticker from batting helmet
I have used goo gone on a football helmet and hockey helmet but never baseball. I had no problems and no issues.
I even used goo gone on a jersey that was glued indide a frame and it got the hardened glue off without staining the jersey.Comment
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Re: Removing an MLB auth sticker from batting helmet
I've used alcohol to remove a Steiner holo from a helmet. I saw no point to the holo, since it didn't identify who used it.Comment
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Re: Removing an MLB auth sticker from batting helmet
My helmet (M's 2014) has the same problem. It's game used, but the idiot entering the info on the MLB site had it as "Game Issued".
The first chance at a sale for me, the person didn't buy it because of this.Comment
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Re: Removing an MLB auth sticker from batting helmet
I think is what he was saying was, that when you look up the holo one the MLB site, it says GAME ISSUED, when in reality it was game used.
My helmet (M's 2014) has the same problem. It's game used, but the idiot entering the info on the MLB site had it as "Game Issued".
The first chance at a sale for me, the person didn't buy it because of this.Always looking for Noah Syndergaard, Charlie Blackmon, Jordan Pacheco & Kenneth Faried items, thx!Comment
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Re: Removing an MLB auth sticker from batting helmet
I have a few helmets that say game issued even though they are 100% game used. Reason being is if they are not authenticated within a certain amount of time (I want to say its right after the game)they flip to issues as opposed to game used.
I know this is true for the Brewers as they didnt sell much game used anything in early to late 2000's at Miller Park. The stuff sat in a Storage locker and I just picked up a few helmets that I literally ripped open the boxed, picked out who I wanted and then they authenticated them as game issued. Clearly they were used.Comment
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Re: Removing an MLB auth sticker from batting helmet
I think there easily are a few hundred collectors on here who would disagree with you re: photo matching. Every scenario is different but hypothetically: I'd pick MLB holo'd as "team issued" with a solid photomatch over MLB holo'd as "game worn" with no photomatch . . . A photo displays much better in a frame next to the item that a printout of hologram data.Comment
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Re: Removing an MLB auth sticker from batting helmet
I think there easily are a few hundred collectors on here who would disagree with you re: photo matching. Every scenario is different but hypothetically: I'd pick MLB holo'd as "team issued" with a solid photomatch over MLB holo'd as "game worn" with no photomatch . . . A photo displays much better in a frame next to the item that a printout of hologram data.Comment
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