Hahaha. Sell that back to the game store!! I’m okay with some etching, it’s history. What I hate is sticky carts and pin corrosion. Excellent work Fenris! I learned a lot!
Regular toothpaste will get rid of permanent marker, especially easy when working on a hard plastic surface like those cartridge shells you have there.
@@fenriswolfretro6729 just a tiny dab of toothpaste applied to kitchen paper, then rubbed gently on to the inked surface will remove the permanent marker in a few seconds, the minty smell will be the longest element that remains, which will go after a day or so, the ink literally absorbs into the paper so no messy residue, doesn't work on printed paper, or porous surfaces, yes it still lifts/ removes marker, but it will lift any printed ink with it, too.
Suddenly, the 8-bit version of Get Lucky you used as background music all makes sense now.
😛
Hahaha. Sell that back to the game store!!
I’m okay with some etching, it’s history. What I hate is sticky carts and pin corrosion. Excellent work Fenris! I learned a lot!
Regular toothpaste will get rid of permanent marker, especially easy when working on a hard plastic surface like those cartridge shells you have there.
I would imagine the cleanup afterward isn't as fun, but it doesn't hurt to try!
@@fenriswolfretro6729 just a tiny dab of toothpaste applied to kitchen paper, then rubbed gently on to the inked surface will remove the permanent marker in a few seconds, the minty smell will be the longest element that remains, which will go after a day or so, the ink literally absorbs into the paper so no messy residue, doesn't work on printed paper, or porous surfaces, yes it still lifts/ removes marker, but it will lift any printed ink with it, too.
I prefer chemical cleaning, it usually get rid of the ink dissolving it.