What i would really like to see is you do a trail one tub in the ultra sonic one tub not in the ultrasonic I'm yet to be convicted it does any thing .. But i have found with a home brew evaporust you quickly get to a point where the rust can be wiped off with a rag So perhaps some kind of minimal agtatoin would make a differnce
I appreciate you making this video and this heads up comparison is very useful. Something that concerns me though is why were you hiding the rust at 8:40 ? You showed it just briefly, spun the bolt around so it couldn't be seen and only the clean portion was visible, and then set the bolts down so only the clean portion was visible? I appreciate you making this comparison video though. Just seems we need to watch close so you don't hide the true effectiveness of the options. From this, it seems Vinegar is about 90% as effective as Glitz and much cheaper. Nice.
Very Cool. I Heard Coca Cola Works Good. Maybe Do A Coke VS Pepsi Rust Challenge. Should Put That 1 Bolt That You Put Into The Other 2, drop it into The Vinegar And See If Vinegar Can Clean It Off.
Good video. Just so you know, the Vinegar will play out after several uses and not do anything. Also Vinegar will attack and take off zinc plating. You might also want to try evapo-rust, it is pretty good.
Thanks - I think you're right re the vinegar.... it was amazingly effective, but yeah, would need changing. Thanks goodness its cheap. I'll give evapo-rust a run in the future. I'm next going to try a Coke vs Pepsi rust removal solution challenge just for kicks. :)
@@jelreviews vinegar is actually very effective. In Singapore, one of my riding friends cleaned up the radiator of my motorcycle with vinegar and the rust that came out was appalling. To flush the vinegar, we used distilled water before pouring fresh coolant into the radiator. That bike was the Honda Shadow 750, so the radiator is small and easy to work on.
You sound Australian... if so - great to see more local talent on YT and unsurprising the video is clear and concise vs the bullshitting that too many US YT'ers do now to extend videos :P
I did not know you could use a small container in the main fluid resevoir and have it work. Great little idea! Do you think the plastic container reduces the effectiveness... maybe a bit slower?
at least one of the bolts appears to be galvanized, so its rust would be mostly surface rust. the union nut was by far the most deeply rusted of the three. you should have used similarly rusted and styles of bolts.
@@R2_D3 You can run a cycle with a degreaser first. Most rust removal products aren't good at degreasing- most of them make clear in instructions that oil/grease shall be removed prior to removing rust with their product
Good Sir, I request you do a quick vid to update using the DIY solution proposed by Beyond Ballistics YT channel which is a chelating compound not "dissolver". Agitation may be the best help for this type vs an acid that requires reaction time (Possibly... not my area of chemistry :P) th-cam.com/video/fVYZmeReKKY/w-d-xo.html
For anyone wondering what concentration the vinegar is in the video it's 4%. The 1:1 mixture makes a 2% concentration.
What i would really like to see is you do a trail one tub in the ultra sonic one tub not in the ultrasonic I'm yet to be convicted it does any thing .. But i have found with a home brew evaporust you quickly get to a point where the rust can be wiped off with a rag So perhaps some kind of minimal agtatoin would make a differnce
I appreciate you making this video and this heads up comparison is very useful. Something that concerns me though is why were you hiding the rust at 8:40 ? You showed it just briefly, spun the bolt around so it couldn't be seen and only the clean portion was visible, and then set the bolts down so only the clean portion was visible?
I appreciate you making this comparison video though. Just seems we need to watch close so you don't hide the true effectiveness of the options. From this, it seems Vinegar is about 90% as effective as Glitz and much cheaper. Nice.
Very Cool. I Heard Coca Cola Works Good. Maybe Do A Coke VS Pepsi Rust Challenge. Should Put That 1 Bolt That You Put Into The Other 2, drop it into The Vinegar And See If Vinegar Can Clean It Off.
Actually... that would be a great idea. Thanks for the suggestion, Bat!!
That's more of a ''folk-tale'', Cola doesn't do all that good of a job... 😁
Good video. Just so you know, the Vinegar will play out after several uses and not do anything. Also Vinegar will attack and take off zinc plating. You might also want to try evapo-rust, it is pretty good.
Thanks - I think you're right re the vinegar.... it was amazingly effective, but yeah, would need changing. Thanks goodness its cheap. I'll give evapo-rust a run in the future. I'm next going to try a Coke vs Pepsi rust removal solution challenge just for kicks. :)
@@jelreviews vinegar is actually very effective. In Singapore, one of my riding friends cleaned up the radiator of my motorcycle with vinegar and the rust that came out was appalling. To flush the vinegar, we used distilled water before pouring fresh coolant into the radiator. That bike was the Honda Shadow 750, so the radiator is small and easy to work on.
@@gohjohan yes, it definitely was effective 👍👍
If using evapo-rust, is an ultrasonic cleaner even needed?
@@utrutr6013 ultrasonic isnt needed for any of them but it makes it much quicker
You sound Australian... if so - great to see more local talent on YT and unsurprising the video is clear and concise vs the bullshitting that too many US YT'ers do now to extend videos :P
Thanks mate - appreciated. I hate unnecessary waffle too and try to get to the point.
I understand plastic containers diminish the ultrasonic waves. Glass is suppose to work much better.
I did not know you could use a small container in the main fluid resevoir and have it work. Great little idea!
Do you think the plastic container reduces the effectiveness... maybe a bit slower?
No, my experience is that the effectiveness is the same.
at least one of the bolts appears to be galvanized, so its rust would be mostly surface rust. the union nut was by far the most deeply rusted of the three. you should have used similarly rusted and styles of bolts.
I did show this in the video - using two exact pairs of rusty bolts in each of the solutions.
If the parts are greasy/oily, it doesn't work well, degreasing the parts before should help a lot.
@@R2_D3 You can run a cycle with a degreaser first. Most rust removal products aren't good at degreasing- most of them make clear in instructions that oil/grease shall be removed prior to removing rust with their product
try evaporust
Good Sir,
I request you do a quick vid to update using the DIY solution proposed by Beyond Ballistics YT channel which is a chelating compound not "dissolver".
Agitation may be the best help for this type vs an acid that requires reaction time (Possibly... not my area of chemistry :P)
th-cam.com/video/fVYZmeReKKY/w-d-xo.html
Thanks for the video link - I'll have to try that dude's homemade solution when I get time. Much appreciated. :)