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Also I tried some commercial liquid (can't remember or find name at moment) meant to be enviro friendly, that you dilute and drop parts into. In 2-3 days it removed the rust and turned the articles black and after a wash and wirebrush they turned out fine, however my neighbour commented that it's not good for springs (like bonnet springs) claiming it can make the metal brittle and potentially dangerous which kind of echos an earlier post here (but not sure if for the same reason). Re Bolts and nuts - years ago I had a box of bolts, nuts, washers I'd removed from a vehicle pickled and gold or silver zinc plated (I don't quite know the exact name for this but would like to know) by a chrome plating company. At the time it seemed a cheap cost because an employee had twitched every single item onto lengths of presumably uninsulated solid copper wire so they were seperated and could suspend them in their pickling bath, and then their anodising? and washing baths. I had to unthread/cut them off the wires but result was fantastic except for thin marks wherever the wire had been snug against the article, which wasn't a problem. I'm intending to try the electrolyte method for bolts, nuts in a similar manner. A backissue of The Old Machinery Magazine gave a similar lesson on Bob's method of derusting. Alex (Hmmmm - my apologies since I didn't realise how long this thread was and I still haven't read to the end) Last edited by cantankrs; 09-02-09 at 06:26. Reason: Foolishly only just realised after posting that I had only read the first page of the thread!!! |
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