D
Don Y
Guest
The most important ergonomic design criteria that my
testers report is \"wipe clean\" -- for all exposed surfaces
(appliances, controls, etc.).
OK, that puts limits on the types of textured surfaces that
can be used -- but that\'s not unsurmountable.
I heard lots of complaints of hand-held/operated devices that
\"feel sticky\" after a while. I had assumed this was just a
buildup of oils/dirt from hands, easily addressed if the surface
was designed for ease of cleaning (many devices have silly nooks
and crannies that are often unnecessary or cosmetic).
But, I\'ve heard from several people that many devices *can\'t* be
cleaned. Or, more exactly, that cleaning doesn\'t remove the
\"stickiness\". (?)
I received a couple of such samples in the past week and
they *are* sticky. And, it doesn\'t appear to be something
that was \"applied\" (even accidentally) by user/use. it didn\'t
wipe clean with mild detergent and water. Or alcohol.
[I was reluctant to try more aggressive solvents for fear of
damaging items that I don\'t own!]
So, I spent the day digging through piles of kit at one of
the non-profits with which I\'m affiliated. And, managed to
find an assortment of similarly \"sticky\" surfaces (some that
see human contact, others that are NOT intended to see contact!)
I\'ve found these to have a coating (?) that is responsible
for the stickiness. And, that the coating appears to *develop*
this stickiness -- it\'s not present in all instances of an object
(age?).
With a LITTLE elbow grease and alcohol, I am able to remove the
coating and expose the \"solid plastic\" beneath. The stickiness
disappears with the coating\'s removal.
I recall having problems with \"rubber\" feet disintegrating
on various devices (e.g., all of my Sun enclosures now have
self-adhesive *felt* feet as a precaution against their
original feet turning to GOO and damaging the finish of the
bits of furniture on which they reside).
And, prompted by today\'s exercise, I noticed that the \"rubber\"
button to operate my electric toothbrush is becoming \"sticky\";
as if losing its chemical integrity.
I assume these other \"sticky\" items have a fine coat of a
similar substance applied to their HARD PLASTIC surfaces...
for \"feel\"?
So:
- what causes this?
- is there anything to prevent it\'s occurrence?
- why would manufacturers go this route if this was an expected outcome?
- are there other alternatives to alter feel/appearance without such
applications? (mild textures?)
testers report is \"wipe clean\" -- for all exposed surfaces
(appliances, controls, etc.).
OK, that puts limits on the types of textured surfaces that
can be used -- but that\'s not unsurmountable.
I heard lots of complaints of hand-held/operated devices that
\"feel sticky\" after a while. I had assumed this was just a
buildup of oils/dirt from hands, easily addressed if the surface
was designed for ease of cleaning (many devices have silly nooks
and crannies that are often unnecessary or cosmetic).
But, I\'ve heard from several people that many devices *can\'t* be
cleaned. Or, more exactly, that cleaning doesn\'t remove the
\"stickiness\". (?)
I received a couple of such samples in the past week and
they *are* sticky. And, it doesn\'t appear to be something
that was \"applied\" (even accidentally) by user/use. it didn\'t
wipe clean with mild detergent and water. Or alcohol.
[I was reluctant to try more aggressive solvents for fear of
damaging items that I don\'t own!]
So, I spent the day digging through piles of kit at one of
the non-profits with which I\'m affiliated. And, managed to
find an assortment of similarly \"sticky\" surfaces (some that
see human contact, others that are NOT intended to see contact!)
I\'ve found these to have a coating (?) that is responsible
for the stickiness. And, that the coating appears to *develop*
this stickiness -- it\'s not present in all instances of an object
(age?).
With a LITTLE elbow grease and alcohol, I am able to remove the
coating and expose the \"solid plastic\" beneath. The stickiness
disappears with the coating\'s removal.
I recall having problems with \"rubber\" feet disintegrating
on various devices (e.g., all of my Sun enclosures now have
self-adhesive *felt* feet as a precaution against their
original feet turning to GOO and damaging the finish of the
bits of furniture on which they reside).
And, prompted by today\'s exercise, I noticed that the \"rubber\"
button to operate my electric toothbrush is becoming \"sticky\";
as if losing its chemical integrity.
I assume these other \"sticky\" items have a fine coat of a
similar substance applied to their HARD PLASTIC surfaces...
for \"feel\"?
So:
- what causes this?
- is there anything to prevent it\'s occurrence?
- why would manufacturers go this route if this was an expected outcome?
- are there other alternatives to alter feel/appearance without such
applications? (mild textures?)