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-   -   Block cleaning (https://www.fordbarn.com/forum/showthread.php?t=218680)

harleytoprock 04-15-2017 07:43 PM

Re: Block cleaning
 

Chris, Muriatic will remove rust much better and quicker than vinegar. I'd try the muriatic again. For your baking soda neutralizing solution, add some liquid clothes detergent to it. The phosphates help to neutralize. I use 2oz of soda plus 2 oz of detergent per gallon of water. Leave the solution in there for about 15 minutes before rinsing.

Chris Haynes 04-15-2017 10:30 PM

Re: Block cleaning
 

Quote:

Originally Posted by harleytoprock (Post 1458611)
Chris, Muriatic will remove rust much better and quicker than vinegar. I'd try the muriatic again. For your baking soda neutralizing solution, add some liquid clothes detergent to it. The phosphates help to neutralize. I use 2oz of soda plus 2 oz of detergent per gallon of water. Leave the solution in there for about 15 minutes before rinsing.

The Muriatic acid did a great job on the engine. I was concerned about putting it in the radiator.

Tom Wesenberg 04-15-2017 10:36 PM

Re: Block cleaning
 

Quote:

Originally Posted by Chris Haynes (Post 1458726)
The Muriatic acid did a great job on the engine. I was concerned about putting it in the radiator.

My uncle's swather was overheating, so I put some muriatic acid in his radiator to clean it out. It cleaned it out so well it opened about 20 pin holes in the old radiator. I had to adapt a 62 Chevy radiator to fit it.

Bruce of MN 06-17-2017 05:41 AM

Re: Block cleaning
 

How necessary is the baking soda flush after using vinegar?

Here is the bucket after my first vinegar flush; pretty nasty! To make draining easier, I jacked up the front until the 5 gal bucket fit under the engine pan.

https://www.fordbarn.com/forum/pictu...ictureid=38285

BoysToys1928A 06-17-2017 06:12 AM

Re: Block cleaning
 

I have heard that raw milk is a great neutralizer of things that are acid or to alkaline. For a chemical burn the fastest way to cool it and safest way is raw milk. Not a chemist but would the milk stop any acid from continue to eat away at the metal? Larry

Dollar Bill 06-17-2017 06:15 AM

Re: Block cleaning
 

Vinegar is acidic and must be neutralized to stop the chemical process you started with the vinegar.

Baking soda will be cheaper than milk.

Kevin in NJ 06-17-2017 06:59 AM

Re: Block cleaning
 

In my reading, muriatic acid is never a good thing for rust removal. The damage can continue long after you think it looks pretty.

I did find that electrolytic rust removal will remove the left overs from the acid in my reading.

I have found the good old wires and manual removal of the rust to be a great way to get rid of all the stuff in the block. Keep in mind not all what you find is rust. I was removing some casting sand too. Plus not all the flaky stuff, what you really need to remove, will come out with chemicals alone.

Tom Wesenberg 06-17-2017 07:29 PM

Re: Block cleaning
 

I agree with Kevin, and would never use muriatic acid as a rust remover. Just the fumes from the acid will rust all the metal in the room where it's stored. I now store it outside.

Tom Endy 06-17-2017 08:37 PM

Re: Block cleaning
 

Quote:

Originally Posted by Brentwood Bob (Post 1458196)
Chris, when you remove the head look at the back of the block. Behind Number 4 there might be some blockage. I used a probe and air to clear it. Put rags in the cylinders first.
Bob


I have a magnet on a long flexible shaft. Also just a long flexible shaft. I put the shaft in a reversible drill motor and go down through all the water jackets in the block where rust wants to settle. The back ones will be the worst. After a few licks in both directions with the drill motor run the magnet down and you will be surprised at how much rust is on the magnet.

Alternate the drill motor/shaft and the magnet until you have it all cleaned out or you are tired of doing it. You can get to all the water jackets from the top of the block. Also a good idea to remove the water inlet casting and go in through there. Periodically blow shop air through the jackets. The head usually does not clog with rust, but it is easy enough to clean it the same way.

Once the head is back on I attach some fixtures I made up that will connect two garden hoses at the inlet and outlet castings. I then connect it to the hot water tap for the washing machine and let it flush until clean water comes out. I then reverse the hoses at the inlet and outlet and flush it more. This is done with the radiator off.

Then I connect my fixtures to the radiator and repeat the procedure.

This does a good job of eliminating rust from the block. The radiator however may have to be taken to a radiator shop and have the top and bottom tanks taken off and all the tubes rodded out and flushed.

Tom Endy

1928Pickuppain 08-04-2018 04:00 AM

Re: Block cleaning
 

Im currently doing a "cleaning" just finishing up after two weeks. I first filled my system with degreaser and ran that until hot and let cool and repeated about 5 times a day for 2 days. i drained it into a bucket and it came out black black black and slightly thick.

Then i filled the system with gasoline ran for 5 min until it started to get hot, boil (vapor lock) and let it cool for 35 min then repeat two more times. i drained it into clean white bucket it came out black black black and settled into some awfull stuff at the bottom. I repeated this one more time and got alot less black results but still dark grey. I then flushed the system back and forth and got large rust chunks and sandy bits out of both radiator and motor. Then i fulled with evapo-rusted leaving it overnight Starting it just to make sure it really pumped through the system. Again it came out black as night. flushed again with water till clear then ran gas again. Once again the gas came out black as all hell and then flushed with water until clear. I then ran Dawn Dish soap in there for about two hours as it ran in the drive. I flushed and got dark brown and small rust chunk. I then ran vinegar 2 quarts worth mixed with water as i drove the car around everywhere for two days. When i flushed it came out dark almost blackish crimson and with a slight viciousness to it. I flushed with water getting only small sandy flecks out and repeated the vinegar and driving for another 3 days. Today it flushed out still a crimson but a lighter brownish crimson. I flushed again. filled with gas, ran till hot, and left over night, in the AM i will drain and flush before filling it with a gallon of ammonia, a quart of hopps powder cleaner and a top it off with a gallon of water with about half a cup of dawn dish soap. I will let is sit for 20-30 min and this will strip the brass radiator of any scale, hard water residue or really ANYTHING, left on the brass radiator itself. (I use this method to clean clock movements after disassembly) it will strip them down even heavy oxidation to the point of pitting and after rinsing it will leave you with bright shiny almost polished looking brass. Then i will flush with water and fill with a 65/35 coolent mix.

I dont necessarily recommend the gas and ammonia all this if you have any nabors as they may kill you. I had my neighbor Jerry come over a few times to make sure i wasent going to blow up the neighborhood (and he puts up with alot of crap from his white house turning back every year form the soot from my stove pipe burning waist oil to compressors and small explosions going off at all hours of the night! Poor bastard but i know the ammonia and hopps will just about drive him from his house tomorrow HaHaHa

Chris Haynes 08-04-2018 10:47 AM

Re: Block cleaning
 

I found that RUST 911 does a remarkable job of cleaning water passages.

Cool Hand Lurker 08-04-2018 10:57 AM

Re: Block cleaning
 

Quote:

Originally Posted by Tom Wesenberg (Post 1458198)
That's the drawback.
I wonder how molasses would work? I've used it to derust some other parts, and it did a good job.

Tom, I put a flathead V8 in a 55 gallon plastic barrel that was filled with water and one gallon of agricultural molasses for three weeks. As the scum came to the top it was scooped into a 5 gallon bucket. When the bucket finally dried out completely there was a layer of solid rust residue about 3" thick in the bottom. The block came out looking like new iron.

I have tried electrolysis, phosphoric acid, muriatic acid, Evaporust, vinegar and a couple other solutions. All of them give good results but none were better than the molasses. It works, it is safe and it is the only method I use now.

Purdy Swoft 08-04-2018 11:40 AM

Re: Block cleaning
 

Has anyone tried red devil lye ?

Pete 08-04-2018 09:17 PM

Re: Block cleaning
 

As most people know, model A guys will go to almost no ends to save a couple of dollars, no matter how much it costs.
Aside from spending the $75 dollars to have a block commercially stripped, there is available a cheap, simple test to tell if there is any acidic residue left in the block. It is a litmus test kit. It will test for both acid and alkaline residue and you don't have to be a rocket scientist to use it.


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