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Electrolytic Rust Removal

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Yes, it works to remove rust and even old paint. Kind of cool, really.

It does take a while. Sometimes a couple of days.
The part doesn't come out shiny-clean, but definitely free of rust.

Usually we'll "zap" the part for a few hours, wire brush it by hand under hot running water to remove loose crud and paint, and repeat until it's clean.

It is a line of sight process, from the surface to the sacrificial anode. having several anodes helps a lot.

one trick I picked up on the internet that really works is finish-cleaning with grey scotch-brite. it works, and for some reason the grey seems to work better than the other scotch-brite pads. It removes the black inert iron oxide residue that's left.

experimenting is as easy as putting some washing soda in a bucket of hot water and submerging the part in it with the battery charger connected as prescribed. simple. cheap.

I still prefer the sandblaster because it's so much faster, and the part looks prettier - but this is a good alternative for non-sandblast-able parts.
 
James Wilson
Surely by now you would have seen the exercise in cleaning a rusty nail back to bare metal by immersing in coka cola, its been around for decades! /bcforum/images/%%GRAEMLIN_URL%%/smile.gif
 
Hi James,
Check out the forums at Caswell plating. They have a little info on using the washing soda. <s>They have a link here at BCF under vendors</s> Oops, it’s gone. Guess they aren’t an affiliate anymore. Doesn’t mean you shouldn’t check it out.
Caswell
 
Hi James,
Look at the top right of Caswell’s site and you’ll see flag icons. Click on the Union Jack and that will open up the UK/ Europe site to see what’s available to you. I didn’t see a forum link there however.
 
I've got all the bits to do that... I'm gonna do it at work someday, just to freak out the oil change kids. (kinda like what happens when I plop an SU on my bench, or tear apart a lucas generator. Yea kid, I said GENERATOR, not alternator).
they're so much fun to mess with
 
Hey Mark -

Great link - you beat me to it. I found that project on "Instructables" last fall, and built it early this year. I amazed my friends and co-workers with the magic rust removal! I seem to recall a link - possibly on that page - to a guy who dropped an entire car (or truck)frame into a pool and removed the rust using a welder as the power source. Since I do not yet have a sand blaster, and time is not of the essence for my restoration, this rpocess is great for cleaning up my smaller rusted parts. In the next couple of weeks I'm actually going to get a larger container and do some of the wheels from my B. I'll let you know how it goes.
Thanks again for the great link!
 
I set one of these up this weekend. It was the best $5.00 I have spent in the garage.


I forgot to take a picture before I painted it, but this should still give you an idea

P1010533.jpg
 
My favorite rust removal techniques, in order.

Vinegar. Works the best. Almost no post-cleanup necessary. Beware of galvonic currents though! It will disolve pot metals and such. Think of it more as a mild muratic acid solution.

Molasses. Slower and more mild than vinegar, but lends itself well to large tubs that you dump big things in and ignore for a weeks on end. Post-cleanup is required.

Electric. Very tempermental and sensitive to buildup and line of sight. Interesting corrosion bloom on brass and copper and the like. Post-cleanup is oddly difficult.
 
I had all the bits for the electrolasis method, so I set it up and let it rip today at work. It did pretty well. I had the cast crank extention off of a TR3 hanging in there for 4 hours and it came out pretty clean with some scotch brite rubbing afterwords. I'm gonna try it again on some other parts tomorrow for the whole day.
I'm using Borax for the Washing soda. I'm not sure if thats the right stuff or not. Also I have 5 pieces of rebar in a 5 gallon bucket and am using a manual battery charger set on 12V 2A (just for data sake)
foxtrapper, Are you just putting the parts in a container filled with vinegar and letting them sit?? that'd be worth a try.
 
Yep. Plastic or glass tub with vinegar, let soak. For gas tank interiors and such I just fill them with vinegar and let it sit for a few days.

You'll get better electrolysis results if you replace the rebar pieces with something like an old saw blade. Lots more surface area, and it makes quite a difference. My latest rendition in the 5 gallon bucket has two flourescent light reflectors, sanded of paint. This puts an almost perfect ring of steel around the piece. It really lights off with this.
 
Been playing with the electrolysis setup for a few days. It's a pretty neat setup. My thought was to get some steel screen or chicken wire and line the bucket with it. My co-worker suggested just using a steel drum. But I think it would eat through in a short time (couple of months or less).
It's definatly not a setup to replace blasting, but it does work well at getting off heavy scale. After about an hour or two the scale just falls off with some light wire brushing.
Good idea with the reflectors...
And I'm gonna try the vinegar thing.
 
I had a guy who worked for me, who was always looking for a magic wand. We tried this even though we have a industrial size blasting cabinet, my impression after doing a few times, I'll hang on to my blasting cabinet.
 
Banjo said:
I've got all the bits to do that... I'm gonna do it at work someday, just to freak out the oil change kids. (kinda like what happens when I plop an SU on my bench, or tear apart a lucas generator. Yea kid, I said GENERATOR, not alternator).
they're so much fun to mess with

You GO, Ben!! /bcforum/images/%%GRAEMLIN_URL%%/devilgrin.gif Always fun t' tease th' pups. You're jus' "payin' it forward"! /bcforum/images/%%GRAEMLIN_URL%%/smirk.gif
 
I've been doing the electrolisys for a few weeks now, and i think it is a great solution for those non-blastable parts, or the ones you don't need for a few days. It is slow. I to will try the vineger, it my nose can stomach it...
 
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