MadModder
The Shop => Tools => Topic started by: Rick O Shea on June 21, 2016, 03:48:43 AM
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I noticed a thread recently about cleaning and it was suggested that elbow grease, no don't laugh , is very good stuff. I wonder if this is suitable to be used in ultrasonic tanks. I believe it is a citric acid based chemical pretty dilute I would imagine with some sort of soap chemical added but I don't know. Any advice or comments.
I am planning to use it to clean small instruments like speedometers. I use ultrasonics in my clockmaking work but with different chemicals, I would like on that is a bit easier to dispose and is not too damaging to the environment. and that works, quite a big ask.
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Elbow grease in the ultrasonic might work, but I find a bucket of propwash just as effective.
Mark
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Rick,
A common or garden dishwasher tablet is pretty good, in some warm water.
Eug
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Hi what is propwash please? product not known to me in UK.
I use paraffin in my ultrasonic for “Rough” cleaning and Automotive panelwipe for finer work (in my other machine).
Panelwipe is a degreaser used in car painting quick evaporating and leaves no residue £12 gallon
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Hi what is propwash please? ...
Used to clean up after spilling either the green oil burnt in the starboard navlight or the red oil burnt in the port navlight on the golden rivet....
(actually propwash is the air current behind a propeller......)
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Thanks for the prop wash, due to dyslexia I read it as hogwash.......
I use paraffin at the moment and have tried a variety of things in the past, I will have a look at panel wipe, does it contain Zylene? which I can't stand.
many thanks for the help so far.
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Hi what is propwash please? ...
Used to clean up after spilling either the green oil burnt in the starboard navlight or the red oil burnt in the port navlight on the golden rivet....
(actually propwash is the air current behind a propeller......)
Strewth, what a job blending the oil for white light, I had no idea.
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Hi what is propwash please? ...
Used to clean up after spilling either the green oil burnt in the starboard navlight or the red oil burnt in the port navlight on the golden rivet....
(actually propwash is the air current behind a propeller......)
Strewth, what a job blending the oil for white light, I had no idea.
You need blue oil to blend with the red & green... three primary colours to give 'white light'... as long as you get the ratios correct... :thumbup: :palm:
George.