Re: Is there a way to dry pine tar?
I like this approach the best.
Is there a way to dry pine tar?
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Re: Is there a way to dry pine tar?
Best not to speed up the drying process. I have several with pine tar and the pine tar will dry up and the sticky feeling will go away. Takes years though.Leave a comment:
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Re: Is there a way to dry pine tar?
Found this old thread.Leave a comment:
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Re: Is there a way to dry pine tar?
Heat usually increases the moisture and makes it more sticky from what I've seen. Not that I tried blow drying pine tar but when I take my game bats out into the heat the tar tends to get wetter and sticky again. Maybe if you set it on cool.Leave a comment:
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Re: Is there a way to dry pine tar?
Not sure about the Tackyness, as I dont man handle them....Leave a comment:
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Re: Is there a way to dry pine tar?
When using it in games we always used rosin bags smacked on the tar to take the stickiness down, because wet pine tar is actually pretty slippery on a bat handle. The rosin will make it dry out quicker. That's why players like posada always end up with the heavy tar because the layers under it have dried out. I don't know if I would suggest this on a collectible bat because your changing how it came off the field but to each is own. I know there are some youtube videos out there on how to do it for players.Leave a comment:
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Re: Is there a way to dry pine tar?
I think that the pine tar dries out naturally over a couple years. I've had bats that I stored "sticky" that are pretty dry (though the battube reeks) after three years.Leave a comment:
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Is there a way to dry pine tar?
I've had some bats with heavy tar that remains sticky for a very long time. Is there a way to "dry" the tar without messing up the bat? I don't like to leave my bats hanging up and not take them out and look at them for fear that they'll fall on the floor and pick up some funk in the tar.Tags: None
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