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Clean steel table?

Chaznsc

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I picked up this 3/4 steel table today. It has some surface rust, not too bad but I need to clean it. How would you approach.....grinder with wire wheel?
 

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DeltaWye

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Toronto, Canada
Oil and a scotchbrite pad. Maybe a cheap sander to drive the scotchbrite pad if it's too much work to do by hand. Don't bother with fancy chemicals, they just turn the rust black and it make it look terrible.
 

JJThrasher

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Grinder with wire wheel or flap disc. I assume this will be a general workshop table and finish isn't all the important.
 
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NUTTSGT

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How bad it the rust and whats your plans as far as using it? For light surface rust I've used light oil and steel wool.


This would be my question also. Are you using it for some perfection or close tolerance work or will it be a welding table top ?

If it's nothing more than a welding table, I'd have at it with a flapdisc and angle grinder. If you want it as smooth as possible than I wouldn't get anymore aggressive than necessary.
 

astroracer

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Get some Metal Prep from Eastwood. Use some maroon ScotchBrite and scrub the whole table top with it. It will remove any surface rust and it leaves a phosphate coating which protects the surface and stops it from flash rusting. I use it on all of my work tables, welding tables and even the lathes and mill. It doesn't leave an oily surface and doesn't impede the weld ground on my tables.
This is one I cleaned up a few years ago. I had to hit this with a D/A and 180 grit to clean it enough to use the Metal Prep.
photo2-vi.jpg

After the first go-round with Metal Prep and a ScotchBrite pad.
photo1-vi.jpg

All cleaned up and ready to use. Took about an hour. The swirls you see are because this is a piece of hot roll plate. Those won't come out.
photo-vi.jpg

It is still clean and rust free today.
Mark
 

RWorth

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I find paper on the random orbital sander usually works better than a wire wheel or scotch pads, choose your grit by how bad the rust is..
 

Lassen Forge

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I was thinking a light touch using a bead blast nozzle and a bag of relatively fine sand (make a sandblast booth out of tarps/visqueen), use low pressure, clean it off, then re-surface the top to the smoothness you desire... phosphate the top (or wax it), and you're good 2 go...
 

bdbecker

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That's about what the steel I used for workbench top looked like when I got it. I just hit it with a wire cup brush to take off the really bad spots and called it good.

View media item 65162
 

sberry

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Brethren, Michigan
Its why its steel, clean it, wipe some WD or Liq wrench over it and dry it off. The DA is ok but I like 7 inch sander better.
Mine are scrap, they were makeshift when I moved in and it all worked well enough that I never stopped to do anything better. One of these days I will design a top maybe and build a new one.
I could close the 3 holes, they were for a pipe vice I used once during rig up. There are 1000's and 1000's of dings in this, been sanded and splatter cleaned 100's of times.
There was a point the bench worked several hours a day. 1000's of weld and cuts over the thing.
 

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Chaznsc

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I stated with my wire wheel, moved on to some CLR and a steel wool, then to my grinder and a poly-carbide wheel.
 

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