Rust Remover--'Jenolite'

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Mikegtr

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Wood working tools--hand saws / chisels / small screws. Some are quite rusty. Anybody use 'Jenolite Rust Remover Thick Liquid'? Did it remove the rust for you?
Have you used it on band saw / bobbin beds to eradicate the rust?
 
Wood working tools--hand saws / chisels / small screws. Some are quite rusty. Anybody use 'Jenolite Rust Remover Thick Liquid'? Did it remove the rust for you?
Have you used it on band saw / bobbin beds to eradicate the rust?
The modern stuff is rubbish.
Wire brush in a angle grinder/ bench grinder.
Citric acid.
Electrolysis.

They are the better way to remove rust from tools.
At Men In Sheds we get tons of old rusty tools and they clean up well.
 
another vote for citric acid from me... use it all the time removing rust from vintage cars beying restored.

Another top tip is to try Phosphoric acid, this is the basic ingredient of things like Jenolite, it converts rust to Iron Phosphate stopping it in its tracks... pro-tip to save money - search for 'Milkstone remover' this is a product from the dairy industry, its way cheaper than branded stuff and is just phosphoric acid under a different name.

If you are in a rush use Hydrochloric acid [brick cleaner] carefully and wash afterwards with the milkstone remover. HCL works in minutes and removes deep pitted rust, just treat it with respect please. Do NOT store HCL, or use it inside your workshop! Always use outside. The fumes will linger indoors and cause any exposed steel to rust overnight! Kinda ironic but it really does some damage!
 
The modern stuff is rubbish.
Wire brush in a angle grinder/ bench grinder.
Citric acid.
Electrolysis.

They are the better way to remove rust from tools.
At Men In Sheds we get tons of old rusty tools and they clean up well.
I am with Yellow Ardvark, used to use Jenolite but modern stuff seems to be a lot weaker recipe. The active ingredient is Phosphoric acid, and you can buy this much cheaper. It will leave a grey deposit behind that you need to clean off. Evaporust is very good, but a bit more expensive.
 
Deox C for me. Although it is citric acid with a few other things in. If you can warm the solution slightly it speeds up the process. It can be purchased in gel form or powder to make a solution to soak things in. Failing that, I have discovered that goose pooh works really well.
 
Quite simple really. I keep animals for my own consumption and occasionally rear a few geese for that purpose. As little goslings are vulnerable, I start by rearing them in captivity, but with access to a small outdoor run. However, they do like to splash in water, even as youngsters,
so I gave them a heavily-rusted sheep-feeding trough to play around in inside the mini-shed. Unfortunately, all they did was **** in it. I'd clean it out, and they'd do the same again. Eventually I got fed up of washing it out as they weren't using it for play anyway and gave them a different splash area outside. Eventually the trough was filled with quite viscous pooh water/sludge. I moved them into a different shed for night-time confinement as they grew and abandoned the smaller space, including the now ****** trough. Some months later I cleaned out the mini-shed and trough and as I hosed the trough out, I noticed the bottom of it was grey. Confused, I looked more closely and it was pure grey steel, right down to the bottom of the pits on the surface, some of which were quite deep. Once dry, I coated it in Hammerite and the rust didn't come back and it got used as a feed trough again.

Now, I'm not recommending one gets geese to **** all over the 1920 Alfa Romeo you might be restoring to neutralise any rust it may have, but I am assuming there is enough acid in goose pooh to eat rust, so it could be a way of de-rusting a metal feeding trough for nothing. I haven't tried chicken, horse, donkey or turkey pooh yet, despite keeping said animals, but I se no reason why it wouldn't work. I do however use dried 'donkey pellets' as fuel for my multi-fuel Rayburn to heat water in the summer. We are in the middle of a cost of living crisis after all!
 
Electrolysis has been touched on. It's been widely used for years. It's very effective, cheap, and only needs a battery charger/12 Volt power supply, baking soda, water and a few bits and bobs, and let the electrons get to work. A few videos to show the process:

https://www.bing.com/videos/rivervi...CB26CAA7C11601C9354FCB26CAA7C116&&FORM=VRDGAR

https://www.bing.com/videos/rivervi...66684C2D3ABF8A3E4BEB66684C2D3ABF8A&ajaxhist=0

https://www.bing.com/videos/rivervi...09CEB73ADCCB386475D409CEB73ADCCB&&FORM=VRDGAR

A wire brush can finish the job off.
 
Electrolysis has been touched on. It's been widely used for years. It's very effective, cheap, and only needs a battery charger/12 Volt power supply, baking soda, water and a few bits and bobs, and let the electrons get to work. A few videos to show the process:

https://www.bing.com/videos/rivervi...CB26CAA7C11601C9354FCB26CAA7C116&&FORM=VRDGAR

https://www.bing.com/videos/riverview/relatedvideo?q=reust removal by electrolysis&mid=3E4BEB66684C2D3ABF8A3E4BEB66684C2D3ABF8A&ajaxhist=0

https://www.bing.com/videos/rivervi...09CEB73ADCCB386475D409CEB73ADCCB&&FORM=VRDGAR

A wire brush can finish the job off.





Citric acid if the parks have nock and crannies.
Electrolysis for simple to bit items. Washing soda will help break down oil and grease.


Any Dc supply will work, 5v 130Amps output.
Here is mine.


DSCN2946.JPG
 
Only use I ever had for Jeno-lite was an unsanctioned method of rapidly removing the carbon deposits on an SLR gas plug followed by a quick wipe with some scotchbrite coated in oil…ssh
 
Thanks GweithdyDU!

As a biologist, aware of avian kidneys being constructed to concentrate urea ( to save carrying water/weight in flight) I can only presume that the (uric) acid concentration in the trough must have been the secret? Citric acid would work the same way, but possibly being higher in pH, would be gentler?
 
I am with Yellow Ardvark, used to use Jenolite but modern stuff seems to be a lot weaker recipe. The active ingredient is Phosphoric acid, and you can buy this much cheaper. It will leave a grey deposit behind that you need to clean off. Evaporust is very good, but a bit more expensive.
I've used both Evaporust and this https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/363998603007
I've found no difference apart from the Flow item from Ebay being considerably cheaper.
 
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