I'd second the hot tank suggestion. cart the block down to the local
machine shop, hand it over, pick it up the next day, pay the nice man $15
or so, and go home. Low effort, low cost, low household environmental impact.
iii
At 11:28 PM 2/10/99 -0600, Gano, Ken wrote:
>
>Most automotive machine shops can "hot tank" a block. It's basically a wash
>solution of hot caustic stuff. The "green" alternative is hot water,
>pressure and time. I've seen some equipment recently that steam cleans and
>rinses block over multiple hours. The one friend who has such a set up
>swears by it.
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