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Plastic dip on boots

rkevins

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Aug 6, 2011
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949
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Central Arkansas
Has anyone ever tried plastic dip on work boots? I have a old pair and thinking about puting some over the steel toe to seee how it would hold up. Or have you tried to patch them with something else?
 
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Air_Cooled_Nut

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Mar 28, 2007
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Portland, Oregon
I doubt it would hold up or even stick. Now, there is a local place that does industrial vinyl dipping and that stuff won't come off unless it soaks in HCL for a few days and it sand-blasted. But they dip metal, not leather.
 

Cobble

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Jul 8, 2012
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20
there are people out there who repair boots. I have had them re-soled, and leather re-stitched. in this quick to throw away & replace society today, many good ones have gone out of business, but if you look hard enough, you may find someone who can fix them. i would get a another piece of leather, a strong saddle needle & waxed thread (stronger than dental floss), some gorilla glue and try to repair. you can't get any worse by trying.
 

bgarrett

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Feb 11, 2006
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4,393
I used to get my boots resoled. It was an economical way to extend the life of the boots and save money. The last time I went there he wanted more than the cost of new boots. No wonder he went out of business.
 

pilotman81

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Apr 24, 2012
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181
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Somewhere on the road
Red Wing has a brush-on coating kind of like rhino-liner that works pretty well on new boots. I'm not sure but I think that it would work well on older boots as well.
 

TheManShopSD

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Oct 16, 2011
Messages
34
Location
South Dakota
Epoxy works great. I purchased a tube at Redwing for $20. I believe they call it Tuff Toe. It is a two part epoxy. A light sand on the toe(sand pad included), apply epoxy and let dry for 10 minutes. Good to go. It is a hard surface once dried and this stuff takes a beating. It is hard to scuff and it isn't coming off. A second mix tube is included to do a second pair. Well worth it.

Plasti Dip is some cool stuff and I have used it for a few items but it won't work so well for boot toes.
 
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rasit

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Sep 17, 2009
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387
Location
SE Pennsylvania
+1 on the Redwing epoxy. Looks like **** but works great. Guy at work used it on an exposed steel toe a month ago and it is holding up well...
 
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wssix99

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Mar 2, 2011
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Location
Chicago, IL
Personally, I keep my old boots at the front door so I can throw them at kids when they come on my lawn.

I'd agree with the comments above. New rubber boots are typically molded thermoplastics, so anything done at home probably won't be as durable.

A good shoe/boot repair place can do wonders. If you don't want it to look pretty, you can have them sew a patch over the toes and use standard waterproofing.
 
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rkevins

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Aug 6, 2011
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949
Location
Central Arkansas
thanks for all the ideas
I have used shoe goo on the toes it didn't last long but it is great in other places, I have looked for the boot toe repair that is like bed liner but haven't found any local, and there are not any shoe repair places around any more
 
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