Nitrocellulose is soluble in a mixture of ethanol and ethylether.
Lacquer thinner will possibly remove it, chemical stripper will definitely remove it.
It may or may not be effective. Traditional lacquer is a nitrocellulose-based coating. Thinners for nitrocellulose include acetone and ethanol (drinking alcohol). Most nail polishes are nitrocellulose lacquers, and that's why acetone is used as a nail polish remover.In general, the rule for thinners is that you need to use the thinner that was originally used to make the coating, or which is sold to be a thinner for the coating. If what's on your brushes isn't lacquer, lacquer thinner may not work as well as a thinner designed for the coating, and it may not work at all.If you already have lacquer thinner somewhere, or some nail polish remover, why not try a little bit to see if it works?
You can get nitrocellulose from playing cards and films if broken apart.
well it depends on the lacquer and thinner types.... synthetic thinner and lacquers also when applied by spray usually takes several hours but dont take the risk without checking the specifics of you products.... why hurry?
No.
positive
Fritz Zimmer has written: 'Nitrocellulose ester lacquers' -- subject(s): Lacquer and lacquering, Nitrocellulose
Nylon membranes are less brittle and easier to handle than nitrocellulose, making them ideal for reprobing. They also respond more robustly to various environmental storage conditions than nitrocellulose. Nylon's highly hydrophilic nature makes prewetting unnecessary, and nylon membranes have much higher binding capacities than nitrocellulose for nucleic acids.
Nitrocellulose is the basis for nail polish--it's what's left behind on your nails after it dries.
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