Quick / Cheap Parts Cleaner
- DurocShark
- IAC Addict!
- Location: A Mickey Mouse Town
- Contact:
- Status: Offline
Quick / Cheap Parts Cleaner
You need:
1 Coffee Can
Hot Water
Purple Power (or your favorite degreaser)
Fill can 1/4 full of hot water. Just under boiling is best. Fill to halfway with Purple Power. Drop in parts. Stir gently. If you have a hotplate or something to keep it warm, all the better.
This is more gentle than using Lye, yet works better than Lye on grease. I just did the valve train off my 79 engine this way and it worked awesome. It won't remove paint, or anything like Lye does, but it's great on caked on grease.
1 Coffee Can
Hot Water
Purple Power (or your favorite degreaser)
Fill can 1/4 full of hot water. Just under boiling is best. Fill to halfway with Purple Power. Drop in parts. Stir gently. If you have a hotplate or something to keep it warm, all the better.
This is more gentle than using Lye, yet works better than Lye on grease. I just did the valve train off my 79 engine this way and it worked awesome. It won't remove paint, or anything like Lye does, but it's great on caked on grease.
- BlissfullyCrusin
- Getting Hooked!
- Location: A human cesspool wedged between MD and VA
- Status: Offline
Hrm..am I missing something here? Purple Power's website says:
Purple Power Original is a twenty minute soaking cleaner that may be reused numerous times without loss of effectiveness, however it should not be used on metals. Available in three convenient sizes :
Am I looking at the wrong cleaner? (The info above is from www.purplepower.com)
Purple Power Original is a twenty minute soaking cleaner that may be reused numerous times without loss of effectiveness, however it should not be used on metals. Available in three convenient sizes :
Am I looking at the wrong cleaner? (The info above is from www.purplepower.com)
- DurocShark
- IAC Addict!
- Location: A Mickey Mouse Town
- Contact:
- Status: Offline
- hambone
- Post-Industrial Non-Secular Mennonite
- Location: Portland, Ore.
- Status: Offline
Isopropyl alcohol takes off much crud with no damage to paint. I cleaned the latch area of my sliding door top to bottom, looks nice and shiny and original paint! Even melts old tar.
http://greencascadia.blogspot.com
http://pdxvolksfolks.blogspot.com
it balances on your head just like a mattress balances on a bottle of wine
your brand new leopard skin pillbox hat
http://pdxvolksfolks.blogspot.com
it balances on your head just like a mattress balances on a bottle of wine
your brand new leopard skin pillbox hat
- Amskeptic
- IAC "Help Desk"
- Status: Offline
GumOut carb spray is a vicious interior vinyl cleaner when anything less will not do. You only get one or two chances with the stuff, but it will take off pen marks, tar, 30 years of caked-on grime.
It will bring your headliner back to brand new so fast it's scary. Don't even try it. Once you have that little 1"x 1" square of brand-new white, the rest of the headliner appears enormous and filthy. If you try to go over the same spot twice, you will be sorry. The crushed grain disappears, then the backing starts to appear. If your paper towel loads up with grime, it will redeposit it on the actively melting vinyl, that's why you have to just pass through once and keep your paper towel clean. I wasted a roll of paper towels and billions of brain cells, but the Squareback headliner looks pretty white. Do not use it on faux dots headliners. On the real perforated headliners, it is excellent. You must use a clean paper towel on colored vinyl, use the GumOut only for severe stains like magic markers. Don't try for perfect because you will get it, and the rest of the interior suddenly looks grungy. Just swipe half-heartedly and once the stain is gone, de-activate the GumOut with another paper towel drenched in vinyl dressing.
Colin
It will bring your headliner back to brand new so fast it's scary. Don't even try it. Once you have that little 1"x 1" square of brand-new white, the rest of the headliner appears enormous and filthy. If you try to go over the same spot twice, you will be sorry. The crushed grain disappears, then the backing starts to appear. If your paper towel loads up with grime, it will redeposit it on the actively melting vinyl, that's why you have to just pass through once and keep your paper towel clean. I wasted a roll of paper towels and billions of brain cells, but the Squareback headliner looks pretty white. Do not use it on faux dots headliners. On the real perforated headliners, it is excellent. You must use a clean paper towel on colored vinyl, use the GumOut only for severe stains like magic markers. Don't try for perfect because you will get it, and the rest of the interior suddenly looks grungy. Just swipe half-heartedly and once the stain is gone, de-activate the GumOut with another paper towel drenched in vinyl dressing.
Colin
- Amskeptic
- IAC "Help Desk"
- Status: Offline
The idiots who built these cars have quite the mix of fake dots and real perforations as they tried to keep the heat in and moisture out. I am not kidding. Even this little Squareback decided to use fake dots over the visors, and yes, Sharpie Marker, here we come. . . because I was not paying any attention by the time I reached the front of the car stoned on petroleum distillates.LiveonJG wrote:I've gotta think you are the only bus owner that that pertains to.Amskeptic wrote:Do not use it on faux dots headliners.
Colin
-John
Colin
- LiveonJG
- IAC Jester!
- Location: Standing on the side of the road, rain falling on my shoes.
- Status: Offline
Have at it Michelangelo! And to think he only had to do it once!Amskeptic wrote:The idiots who built these cars have quite the mix of fake dots and real perforations as they tried to keep the heat in and moisture out. I am not kidding. Even this little Squareback decided to use fake dots over the visors, and yes, Sharpie Marker, here we come. . . because I was not paying any attention by the time I reached the front of the car stoned on petroleum distillates.LiveonJG wrote:I've gotta think you are the only bus owner that that pertains to.Amskeptic wrote:Do not use it on faux dots headliners.
Colin
-John
Colin
-John
Keep it acoustic.
- DurocShark
- IAC Addict!
- Location: A Mickey Mouse Town
- Contact:
- Status: Offline
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- I'm New!
- Status: Offline
Re: Quick / Cheap Parts Cleaner
Super Clean, strong enough to remove some rust stains and an excellent parts cleaner, grease and grime remover, but gloves should be worn. Ainokea