Is Snow Seal the brand name or is that just what it does?Seems I remember Snow Seal from some where, but it has been a very long time.
Wellsite mechanic & pumper for Pioneer Natural Resources...2007-2015. Fun....I was lucky enough to tote an unopened gallon of pure neatsfoot oil home from work a few months ago. It wasn't on any list of approved substances for our natural gas compressor station, and trying to ship it out or legally dispose of it would've been a paperwork nightmare because we have a whole list of state and federal agencies hanging over our shoulders like vultures. So I solved the problem by disappearing it before it came to official notice, when we found it stashed in a back corner of the machine shop...
Apparently it was used on leather washers in our original mainline valves, and I've read that it's also used as a cutting oil when machining aluminum. I soaked the living heck out of the leather pouch on my trebuchet with some of it, and stuck the rest in my flammables cabinet. Made the leather soft and flexible...
It is the name of the product:Is Snow Seal the brand name or is that just what it does?
I have also heard that Snow Seal will rot your boots thread.I have only used it on raw knife sheaths with no problems,gives them a nice dark brown color.I melt mine then apply with rag and toothbrush the seams.Buff off the excess and you are good to go.Every nostrum seems to have its’ loyal adherents as well as detractors. When I bought my first baseball glove in circa 1964 ( a Ted Williams no less), the elderly owner of the sporting goods store steered me away from neatsfoot oil and suggested “Snow-proof”, which is more of a grease than an oil. It has served me well ever since, and is arguably more difficult to obtain. Doesn’t seem to harm the stitching nor darken the leather as much.
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