ckucia
Well-known member
I inherited a bunch of reamers from my father/grandfather along with a bunch of other tools.
Moisture/rust has been a serious issue for me in my workshop and I had to triage this when I brought the tools home and discovered how quickly they were attacked. So I finally got around to addressing the reamers. I just spent about two weeks examining them, cleaning, degreasing, Evaporust and/or Purple Power as needed, then sorting, rust-preventataive oiling, IDing and labelling them.
I have a bunch of odd sizes so there's really no index that I could find that would work. I didn't want them banging around against each other in some sort of large container, so I got a bunch of 9/16 diameter plastic tubes with caps on ebay. So far so good.
Problem is, I've noticed that some of the tools I put in plastic baggies to protect last year started light rusting even inside the baggie. I attribute this to moisture in the air captured in the bag. I've starting putting little desiccant capsules in all my tool storage containers and using waterproof plastic boxes from Plano/Flambeau.
Can't really fit any desiccant capsules in these small tubes.
Was wondering if silica desiccant beads will harm tools they're in contact with? Thought about pouring a small amount into each tube before slipping the reamer in. It's a bit more work, but I also considered using a leather punch on some window screen to make a little barrier - pour in some beads, drop the disk of screening and then drop in the reamers. Just because the beads are likely to stick to the oiled reamers and become ineffective once coated.
I know I'm being a little obsessive, but I lost a lot of good tools to rust and lost a lot of time recovering what I could. I don't want to open a box a year from now and find I have to go through all this again.
I've done all the moisture mitigation I can do, and we plan on moving once I get my tool situation sorted so protection is my focus.
Moisture/rust has been a serious issue for me in my workshop and I had to triage this when I brought the tools home and discovered how quickly they were attacked. So I finally got around to addressing the reamers. I just spent about two weeks examining them, cleaning, degreasing, Evaporust and/or Purple Power as needed, then sorting, rust-preventataive oiling, IDing and labelling them.
I have a bunch of odd sizes so there's really no index that I could find that would work. I didn't want them banging around against each other in some sort of large container, so I got a bunch of 9/16 diameter plastic tubes with caps on ebay. So far so good.
Problem is, I've noticed that some of the tools I put in plastic baggies to protect last year started light rusting even inside the baggie. I attribute this to moisture in the air captured in the bag. I've starting putting little desiccant capsules in all my tool storage containers and using waterproof plastic boxes from Plano/Flambeau.
Can't really fit any desiccant capsules in these small tubes.
Was wondering if silica desiccant beads will harm tools they're in contact with? Thought about pouring a small amount into each tube before slipping the reamer in. It's a bit more work, but I also considered using a leather punch on some window screen to make a little barrier - pour in some beads, drop the disk of screening and then drop in the reamers. Just because the beads are likely to stick to the oiled reamers and become ineffective once coated.
I know I'm being a little obsessive, but I lost a lot of good tools to rust and lost a lot of time recovering what I could. I don't want to open a box a year from now and find I have to go through all this again.
I've done all the moisture mitigation I can do, and we plan on moving once I get my tool situation sorted so protection is my focus.


