Anyon know of a slick way to get a BUNCH (like 10 coffee cans full) of nuts, bolts, studs, and washers clean with minimal labor?
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Thread: Nuts and Bolts
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11-28-2008, 03:25 PM #1
Nuts and Bolts
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11-28-2008, 03:45 PM #2
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a plastic bead blaster would do the trick.
we have one at work and it cleans rust and dirt off in no time, if you could find someone that had a blaster you could use
you would need to put a handful in a cup that had lots of holes in it. this would let the plastic media blast threw the cup with the nuts and bolts in it & as you blasted you would shake and turn the parts so that everythings gets blasted. blow off the excess dust and blast another cup full till you had them all clean
hope this helps , this is the fastest way I know of
.............. Richard
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11-28-2008, 07:20 PM #3
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What is it that needs to be cleaned off; grease,rust,etc?
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11-28-2008, 07:25 PM #4
soak them in diesel,
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11-28-2008, 07:29 PM #5
Ya or keraseen.
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11-28-2008, 07:53 PM #6
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Buy new ones?
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11-29-2008, 02:18 PM #7
That would work for the most part
I usually do buy new ones - thats why I have 10 can full of used ones - guess I'm too cheap to throw some stuff away
Most of the ones I want to clean are either rusty or caked with grease. there are some engine bolts, although I usually throw away stock stuff and replace with ARP bolts - those get cleaned by hand. Some of the engine bolts I keep for a cheap claimer motor. There are a bunch of body bolts for fenders and such that I would like to clean that are rusty and have paint on them.
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11-29-2008, 02:57 PM #8
a parts tumbler is really slick with a small amount of dish detergent and water it shakes it rubs off the grit until the parts are clean. The one I I have seen looked like a minature concrete mixer and it shook like an ultrasonic scrubber.
Very cool by the way.
Good Thread
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11-29-2008, 03:04 PM #9
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11-29-2008, 08:55 PM #10
Use this machine with this abrasive media in it.
It works wonders on screws and bolts. Smoothly cleans oxidized metal. Only problems are that it doesn't really clean the internal threads and it won't clean grease. If they have dried grease, wash them in kerosene first.
Really cleans external threads good.
I suppose if you were really brave, you could use this media along with quart of kerosene, but that sounds like begging for a fire.Equipped with red and blue... and red and green!
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