David S
Active member
Hmmm... going to have to try kroil... have always used PB great with sucess!!
Have any of you guys used Ballistol? It is unreal.
if you check the menards site, at the bottom of the product page, they have the MSDS sheets link. i bought some of the "green" greases for .99c the other day, havent opened them yet, but did look at the MSDS, and it stated vegetable oil in some, and soy in others iirc.it isn't that stuff that Menards had on sale for .99 cents a quart is it? I picked up some to give a shot. I think it smells like burnt ****** fluid. Something lube? With absolutely no useful info on the bottle or their website. I have a few things sitting in a jar of it as an experiment. Its going up against the kerosine mix I made. I emailed the company for more information and all i got was a call them. I cannot see the product being around long with the lack of info as to what it is and can do. I wasn't expecting such a horrible smell from a supposed natural product.
I use CRC Freeze off. Its made in Warmintser PA So im not sure if is only local to the PA area. Any one else have CRC sprays in there area?
I used some Fluid Film for the first time at the hardware store Saturday. We had some rusted pipe fittings we needed to remove from a home-made sprinkler for a customer. I let the Fluid Film soak in for several hours, and we muscled the fittings off with 2 24" pipe wrenches.
I think I still prefer Kroil, though.
Machinist Workshop magazine studied the most popular penetrating oils to see
what did the best job of removing rusted bolts by measuring the pounds of torque
required to loosen the bolt. I'm not sure just what flavor bolt they were using
that would take 516 pounds of torque but it must have been a monster.
These were the results they published:
Penetrating oil: Average load:
None...................................516 lbs.
WD-40.................................238 lbs.
PB Blaster.............................214 lbs.
Liquid Wrench........................127 lbs.
Kano Kroil..............................106 lbs.
ATF-Acetone mix......................53 lbs.
“The Auto Trans fluid- acetone mix was a "home-brew" mix of 50-50 ATF-acetone.
The home brew tested better than the commercial products in this test. Note that
Liquid Wrench is about as good as "Kroil" for about 20% of the price.” :
I call WD 40 weasle piss because that is about how useful it is my book.
I have always used WD40, BP Blaster and a few other products until I was told about Fluid-Film. I tried it and have gotten rid of all the other stuff I used.
The main reason I changed to Fluid-Film is I was trying to find something I could spray on my tubing dies to keep them from rusting in the shop, due to humidity and lots of damp weather, during the winter months. All the other products I used never really worked at preventing a surface coat of rust and out of desperation I tried Fluid-Film and it has worked just fine. It is a penetrating oil, just like WD40 and the other products, that works great on everything, but it also contains a rust inhibitor that does not dry out. I now use it on all my machined surfaces and rust is a thing of the past.
It is sold nationwide at John Deere stores and is also sold at some auto parts stores. I've heard that NAPA, AutoZone and a few other stores will be selling it soon.
Check out their web site and find out all the other things Fluid-film is used for. www.fluid-film.com
Another vote for Kroil. The closest stuff available locally is MOPAR Rust Penetrant. That stuff is available at any Dodge/Chrystler/Jeep parts counter.
WD40 is good for removing label adhesive and for cleaning up blow-molded cases.
WD40 can be bought by the gallon and used in pump handle sprayers.. Good and inexpensive for cleanup work, and rust prevention... It has been nicknamed "Water Displacer 40" I use allot of WD40 ,, but not for freeing a rusted bolt..
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do you guys know of a spray product that can "flash freeze" something? had a few situations where several applications of PB blaster and heat didn't do anything... stuck threaded stud in a metal plate. at the time, i thought it would be cool if I could heat up the surrounding metal and then flash freeze the stud to see if it would "break free" ... is there some sort of can of liquid N2 or something one can buy for fairly cheap?