I picked up a used intake and want to clean it up nice nice before installing on my 360. Any suggestions on what works best ( there's no bead blasters around here so I need a chemical fix). Nix the engine shampoo skip the oven cleaner.... what have you used for the best success?
For the degreaser I think its called Eagle One Magwheel cleaner ,Then beadblast ,I would paint it ,If you dont have access to a bead blaster
Acetone or brake cleaner works quite well, then wash it with hot water with a little dishsoap mixed in, rinse with hot water let it dry completely then coat it with clear engine paint (satin) It will look sharp and stay that way!
Mineral spirits paint thinner type solvent will get the thick oily deposits off, but you'll need carb cleaner or lacquer thinner to get rid of the varnish fuel stains. Rust stains will probably need to be bead blasted off.
i have a 5 gal bucket of berryman carb cleaner dip it the hot water jet it comes out as clean as a babbys ****ocks
if the sand blaster put gl*** beads in the pot it would be a bead blaster, any cheap blaster would work, just use fine beads, but i dont like to look of bead blasting.
There is an acid made for cleaning aluminum, busch makes some they have a display at most bigger rod meets, or go to a heavy truck parts house. Mix it about 4 times stronger that the directions say and it will take a million years of gunk off. Don't let it dry or it will leave terrible streaks and other wise it will leave the part kind of bleached out white like all aluminum after age. Trucker use it to clean aluminum trailers also work for a good prep for polishing weathered aluminum. Hope this helps, best I got!!!
Send it to the vat, or better yet send it to a vat with heated diluted caustic acid in it then it'll shine like new money. I used to work at a company called Wells Aluminum here in Belton we had a vat like that in the die shop, we cleaned a lot of intakes, valve covers and even a few motorcycle parts in it. We just never let the bosses know what we were doing.
Try marine clean ive been useing it for all cleaning projects lately.Paint stores have it ..POR-15 boys use it.
Best stuff I have used is called Aluminum Jelly. http://www.shopwiki.com/DURO"+ALUMINUM+JELLY+Aluminum+oxidizion+remover http://www.loc***eproducts.com/p/s_trmt_alum/overview/Loc***e-Aluminum-Jelly.htm
The soap from a k&n cleaner kits works awesome. It cuts all of the oil and will etch the aluminum if you let it sit for too long. I recently used it on an old torker and it looks like new, it even removed all of the fuel varnish from people doing jet swaps without draining the bowls right. I buy it by the gallon at my local yamaha shop.
I get roasted every time I say this but muriatic acid works great. If you bead blast it, the look changes but muriatic acid will make it look like it did when it first came out of the box. I mix it 4:1 with water and first get the part clean of any gunk and grime. Spray the intake and let it sit for 30-60 seconds. use a stiff bristled brush to clean any stains (wear rubber gloves and a face shield). DO NOT LET THIS STUFF DRY. Rinse it off with water and repeat if necesarry.
I clean and degrease as good as possible, then coat them down with cast aluminum paint. Get enough paint on it and it will always clean up good after some use. Looks just as good as bare aluminum!!
I bet there's a way to hook up a jar of abrasive sand to a vacuum cleaner. I know there's a little sand blaster cup and nozzle you can run off your air compressor. Try this: http://www.harborfreight.com/catalogsearch/result?category=&q=sand+blaster With a coupon it's even cheaper.
I've used this method too. Decent results, but I still go back to Eagle 1 Chrome and Wire Wheel cleaner. It's a caustic material but it works better than anything else I've tried. Spray it on, let it sit for a few minutes then scrub it with a toothbrush, rinse it thoroughly and see how it looks. Sometimes the tougher stains may need a second or even third treatment.
Various mild acid solutions are safe and will remove the oxide surface of aluminum, for cleaning. Lye (sodium hydroxide) and muriatic acid (diluted HCL) are very caustic and can result in a violent reaction with aluminum and are not so safe. It's too strong an acid for cleaning aluminum and will rather disolve it. After its clean, you can have it clear anodized to preserve the surface longer, restoring and increasing thickness of the protective oxide coating.
Had an old timer tell me to use wire wheel acid, but was never able to find any. Anybody else tried that stuff?