Woodchips2
Established Member
Dominic Chimea from The Repair Shop has just posted a video on YouTube showing how to use electrolysis to remove rust from tools using a car battery charger.
Regards Keith
Regards Keith
I like electrolysis for big items as the ingredients and equipment are so cheap and it's easy to keep and eye on the process. For small items though it is a hassle. For small items I much prefer citric acid, also very cheap and easy.
Never tried citric acid, I always use phosphoric. Does a great job but leaves a thin black deposit behind, surprisingly good at stopping further rust, and easy enough to remove if you intend to paint it. I assume citric probably takes longer, what sort of finish does it leave?I like electrolysis for big items as the ingredients and equipment are so cheap and it's easy to keep and eye on the process. For small items though it is a hassle. For small items I much prefer citric acid, also very cheap and easy.
Couldn't agree more. Lost count of how many videos I have seen about acid blueing on guns. Only been done for about 400 years plus.One of the interesting things on youtube is how folks will post videos that are probably covered 300 times already. And youtube will prioritize the new ones as if it's something new.
I don't know how long this process has been used by hobbyists widely, but at least as long as the mail lists for old tools have gone around. In the states, it was heavily used when I started long after that (2005 or so) and I did it like everyone else does (of course, it works - I used a battery charger on trickle instead of a car battery). It seems to have fallen a little out of fashion in the US as the overcleaning and etching of tools is seen as a bit more garish (at the time, collectors decried the gray etch or any bright metal on an old plane that wasn't still bright from being stored carefully). Back then, if you restored a stanley plane and re-japanned it (I didn't do this, but saw it), you could get twice as much as a good plane with patina on the cheeks (let alone rust - rusty planes would sell cheap even on ebay). Times have changed, but youtube serves me plenty of over the top "restoration" videos. I guess that's the in thing now.
If you could divide youtube into gimmicks, the restoration gimmick is of the "Something for nothing" type, the same as the types where people build bandsaws out of plywood or make water turbines from scrap material.
Couldn't agree more. Lost count of how many videos I have seen about acid blueing on guns. Only been done for about 400 years plus.
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