DreadfullBetty wrote:Has anyone out there used Wintergreen oil to soften hardend old rubber? You can get it at horse tack shops. By soaking hardened rubber parts in the oil suppleness can be restored. It's a vintage motorcycle restoration trick. As far as I know you can't over soak the rubber item and the only draw back is that things smell a little minty afterwards.
Now this is something I never heard of. I don't mind "Minty Fresh" fins or straps or even a minty mask. I'll try this trick on some of my more "mature" rubber artifacts.
As the Captain said however, there is nothing out there that will chemically rejuvenate rubber once it has lost polymer cohesion internally. The culprit here is sulphur. Sulphur is the catalyst in the "Vulcanization" process that creates the strength and resiliance that we love about rubber, BUT sulphur reacts to oxygen and UV light continuously. As a piece ages, sulphur will leach from a rubber item and bond with O2 and thus leave the gum rubber matrix it was originally mixed with. We have all seen the end result on tires as well as scuba items that were less than loved by their owners, to wit; cracking & dry rot, which only exaserbates the problem even more. Other reactions, depending on the rubber blend, will leave a piece gummy and sticky over time.
Preservation:
I do mask and general rubber maintenance on all my "actively used" items once a year and ensure that those other items not actively being used or kept in situ are properly preserved and stored (away from heat and light). After a thorough cleaning, I seal up items with silicon grease, talcum powder or sometimes both. Silicon can seal and stop the oxidation process, but must be re-applied from time to time (if the piece is actively being used) in order for it to work. Storage in talcum powder also acts as a preservative agent because it bonds with sulphur molecules on the surface of an item on a molecular level and thus halts further reaction between the rubber and the environment. Many of us, if not all, have run into an item that has talcum on it still from the factory for this very reason. As many of us know, a really thorough rinsing in clean fresh water after every dive is a must for keeping your rubber and silicon items in good order.