jstroede
Well-known member
Alright, so I bought myself a new toy with some amazon gift cards I received. I purchased a 15L size ultrasonic. I first started messing with these in my sister's dental office, and saw how well they worked. I set it up for the first time last night and played around a little, and know enough to ask some questions. I have searched and found some things to start with, but would like to hear some more experiences. I filled the unit with distilled water, and will mainly be working with cleaners in glass jars. Right now I am working on cleaning up the parts from a set of cylinder heads to rebuild, so using the jars allows me to keep all the parts separate. My first go was with diluted simple green. I first tested on some valve spring retainers that I took off of a new set of heads. They used some sort of spray on protectant on it that nothing I had tried would cut, so I just replaced them. Even the old Berryman carb dip wouldn't cut it. At any rate, about 30 minutes in the ultrasonic with the simple green and I was able to use a brass brush and clean them off. Perfect! Off to a good start. I also read about using water and Dawn dish soap. I tried another jar with that. It too worked on the same retainers, but not as well. That lead me to do some test valve springs. They came out really nice from the simple green solution (not so green any more though).
That brought me to my first issue though. Not long after pulling the valve springs out, they started to show some flash rust. What are you doing to combat that? I stuck them back in, ran another cycle, then sprayed them with WD40 and zip lock bagged them. That seemed to work, but was messy. Anyone come up with a better solution?
Then I moved on to the some real parts. These parts for the most part were pretty clean. After one short cycle in fresh simple green solution, the springs, retainers, locks, and springs were all clean and ready to go. I sprayed them with WD40 and bagged them, no real additional effort required. Great. Now for the bad. The valve and it's carbon buildup were virtually untouched. I was able to take a brass brush and remove a little, but not much. I ended up running the valves for like 45 minutes with little improvement from the underside of the valve head. The faces were very clean though. Any idea of something I could use with the ultrasonic that will cut through this carbon? I finally relented on these two and used some paint stripper, which works fairly well but requires about 4 coats and scrubbing to get most of it off. I would really like to avoid this step.
Next thing is going to be some parts that have some mild surface rust. What would be my cleaner of choice here? I have seen vinegar, evapo-rust, some home brew stuff, etc. I assume anything acidic I am going to need to then neutralize and then rust protect. Again I am not looking to clean heavily rusted parts. I am more looking for just light corrosion on stuff. I eventually want to move into running all of my tools through. I have an extensive collection of Craftsman USA tools, and some of the sockets have some very light corrosion on the inside surfaces that I would like to clean and get back to like new. Obviously scrubbing hundreds of sockets isn't going to be fun, so that's why I was looking at this as the tool to get the job done.
Who has some tips for a newbie with this thing? So far, I see it has a ton of potential in my garage to be a time saver.
Thanks.
John
That brought me to my first issue though. Not long after pulling the valve springs out, they started to show some flash rust. What are you doing to combat that? I stuck them back in, ran another cycle, then sprayed them with WD40 and zip lock bagged them. That seemed to work, but was messy. Anyone come up with a better solution?
Then I moved on to the some real parts. These parts for the most part were pretty clean. After one short cycle in fresh simple green solution, the springs, retainers, locks, and springs were all clean and ready to go. I sprayed them with WD40 and bagged them, no real additional effort required. Great. Now for the bad. The valve and it's carbon buildup were virtually untouched. I was able to take a brass brush and remove a little, but not much. I ended up running the valves for like 45 minutes with little improvement from the underside of the valve head. The faces were very clean though. Any idea of something I could use with the ultrasonic that will cut through this carbon? I finally relented on these two and used some paint stripper, which works fairly well but requires about 4 coats and scrubbing to get most of it off. I would really like to avoid this step.
Next thing is going to be some parts that have some mild surface rust. What would be my cleaner of choice here? I have seen vinegar, evapo-rust, some home brew stuff, etc. I assume anything acidic I am going to need to then neutralize and then rust protect. Again I am not looking to clean heavily rusted parts. I am more looking for just light corrosion on stuff. I eventually want to move into running all of my tools through. I have an extensive collection of Craftsman USA tools, and some of the sockets have some very light corrosion on the inside surfaces that I would like to clean and get back to like new. Obviously scrubbing hundreds of sockets isn't going to be fun, so that's why I was looking at this as the tool to get the job done.
Who has some tips for a newbie with this thing? So far, I see it has a ton of potential in my garage to be a time saver.
Thanks.
John

