Ray-CA
Well-known member
I buy the dollar store vinegar and use that. Might have to try a vinegar bath with electrolysis on some larger pieces I have.
Ray
Ray
White vinegar is my go-to rust remover as well. Best part is, the rusty vinegar can be used as a wood stain. Works great on hardwoods like oak, if you want to try it on pine, you'll want to mix it with some old coffee grounds.
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That is the down side of acid rust removers. They don't know when to stop. Evaporust only reacts with the rust. Electrolysis stops when the rust is gone and all the gunk is on the other electrode. Vinegar is still my favorite for cleaning up the green crud from leaking alkaline batteries. What looks like a total disaster comes right off with a q tip. Of course, the plating on contacts is already gone but a little dielectric grease keeps future oxidation in check.
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Someone else wrote that he lets the vinegar sit overnight, another a few days. Is there a typica amount of time to let the vinegar sit, or just check on the metal every so often to check its progress?
...Back to the stain, is vinegar necessary? Or would just a pure coffee ground stew be adequate? I wonder if the extra acid from the vinegar helps the stain bond. For pure wood it’s likely no issue, but for wooden objects with metal, the acidic vinegar may lead to chronic rusting where the vinegar impregnated wood contacts the metal.
As some above have noted, it will flash rust real quick. After I clean something, unless I intend to paint it within an hour or two, I will coat it with transmission fluid. It's cheap and prevents rust. If I need to paint it, I wash it with soap and water...then soak in lacquer thinner or acetone...that will remove any remaining oils....then paint.
I got some nice small single serving pans made of cast iron. I used vinegar to clean them. But I kept getting a black crud on the top.
Best part is, the rusty vinegar can be used as a wood stain. Works great on hardwoods like oak, if you want to try it on pine, you'll want to mix it with some old coffee grounds.
Where did you find 25% vinegar? Even the Walmart cleaning vinegar is only 9%.