land-speed
[Top] [All Lists]

Re: Rust removal...

To: Robert Jepson <robere@xensei.com>, <land-speed@autox.team.net>
Subject: Re: Rust removal...
From: Skip Higginbotham <saltrat@pro-blend.com>
Date: Sat, 04 May 2002 17:47:37 -0500
Bob, List:
Excellent job of derusting!!! After doing what Bob says,
If anybody wants to.....see my site and note that the Corrosion Block will
keep rust away for up to a year and a half. List members get it for my cost
plus 10%. Stuff seems to work....and.....If you don't want it....then don't
get it. (-:
Skip 
www.pro-blend.com




At 02:38 PM 5/4/02 +0000, you wrote:
>List,
>    Years ago I was at a Redi-Strip franchise and watched a car body 
>going in a tank. When it finally settled in I saw a spark where it made 
>electrical contact. I asked "What are you doing, plating the rust off?" 
>The propriator mumbled some gibberish, which told me I was on to 
>something pretty simple, and I found out later just how simple it was...
>I finally got around to making up a de-rusting apparatus. It works 
>great, and little by little the rusty artifacts around here are turning 
>into good looking satin grey parts. It's especially rewarding to treat a 
>hard to sand part like a steel wheel.
>Plating shops pickle (HCl) rust off (it's fast). This can introduce 
>small Hydrogen molecules into the matrix of the steel, which over time 
>travel and can introduce structural flaws and subsequent failure 
>(Hydrogen embrittlement). Most, but not all, plating processes can do 
>the same thing. An electric rust removal technique with subsequent 
>painting or, say, electroless nickel plating, should not introduce free 
>Hydrogen nor introduce a hazard in a tempered, stressed steel part.
>Also, you may be aware that a plated / got rusty/ got re-plated part 
>doesn't last long without going rusty again. That's because free Oxygen 
>gets introduced into the part when the initial rusting takes place, and 
>that oxygen in the part will eventually react and produce rust again. 
>This electric de-rusting process supposedly drives off the free oxygen 
>as well...
>I'm also pretty sure the mild alkali solution with rust is good for 
>making grass green here in acid-rich soil New England; somebody told me 
>once that the Chem-Lawn guys put iron in their juice as it makes grass 
>greener.
>http://www.metalwebnews.com/howto/rust/rust.html
>Remember, if it's hard, it's wrong!              Bob Jepson in Boston

///  unsubscribe/change address requests to majordomo@autox.team.net  or try
///  http://www.team.net/mailman/listinfo
///  Archives at http://www.team.net/archive/land-speed


<Prev in Thread] Current Thread [Next in Thread>