On Tuesday, January 23, 2018 at 6:43:30 AM UTC-5, J.B. Wood wrote:
Hello, all, and my question deals with plastic/rubber materials as used
on athletic shoes and growing brittle with age even with non-use. I
recently unboxed a NOS pair of Etonic running shoes that I purchased
about 15 years ago. After I ran in them a couple of times the plastic
sides and heel split about half way across exposing the inner foam
padding material. Could I have coated/soaked the outer material in
something to prevent or discourage this cracking/splitting? Or is the material just too dried out to resurrect? (I've had similar issues with aged/dried out adhesives but this is different.) Thanks for your time
and comment. Sincerely,
--
J. B. Wood e-mail: [email protected]
Full disclosure: I am not a plastics expert.
I expect that it is too late. AFAIK, there is nothing to restore the flexibility back to the foam.
there might have been a way to prevent the aging of the foam, but
I don't know what that might have been. Speculations
of storage means for preventing the aging:
store them in sealed package to prevent outgassing.
(what package material? foil wrap? sealed plastic bag? vacuum bag?)
store in a temperature/humidity controlled environment
(but what are the optimum setting for 15 year storage?)
store in original packaging, but treat regularly with "moisturizer"
(what moisturizer? water based? oil based? mixture?)
I'm hoping some will come in and blow all my ideas away
with some real information.
My final remark is that I suspect that most foams have
a limited shelf life. 15 years is a long time to just
sit on the shelf.
Sorry I wasn't much help.
Ed
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