Originally posted by mikkekeswick:
Or a brush! Compressed air etc
If you use acetone to remove any oil then what you do is simply take a bit of 'surface' oil off. Yes you will get a dirty rag and common sense would tell you that the surface is cleaner now but what happens is more oil get pulled out of the rest of the timber.
I totally disagree. how in the world is that pulling more oil from the rest of the wood? unless you are literally submerging your stock in acetone for some amount of time, that isn't going to happen. I've been using many solvents for many purposes for many years in my line of work, and I've never seen anything that would support this claim, which I've heard repeatedly among bowyers. using acetone, MEK, naphtha, lacquer thinner, alcohol or any relatively fast drying solvent will clean the glue surface quite nicely, removing oil and other contaminants from it and flashes off in seconds(acetone and denatured alcohol, anyway) and isn't going to draw more oil from somewhere inside your bow wood. I'm not suggesting that anyone must use solvents to clean their wood before gluing. with the quality of the epoxies we have today, it is probably not necessary, but I've been cleaning all my glue surfaces for over 20 years with acetone, and I recommend it highly. just don't get it on your skin.