Poor Man's Parts Cleaner
#1
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Poor Man's Parts Cleaner
Looking at a grease clogged derailleur that is in really good shape but gunked up. This was a nice video on parts cleaning if someone can't afford an ultrasonic cleaner. I have seen loads of palm sanders for cheap at garage sales.
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#2
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that's clever!!
#3
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I wonder if anyone who is a reloader and and a cyclist has tried parts in a brass cleaner
#4
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He should do the same test with the solution and time, but without the sander.
WD-40 and paper towels are basically all I've ever needed for filthy bike parts.
WD-40 and paper towels are basically all I've ever needed for filthy bike parts.
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If I was trying to process lot of parts, I would use a tumbler to polish after running through an ultrasonic. Mechanical cleaning devises are primarily time savers, but ultrasonic cleaners will clean mechanically inaccessible surfaces like inside a chain link, or a carburetor. In practice I use OMS or WD-40 and a toothbrush and a rag/ paper towel. But with the tonnage of bike parts and old tools collecting around me I am seriously considering finding an ultrasonic cleaner and maybe a tumbler. If you look on Ebay there are folks selling parts in various mechanical states, but spotlessly clean and polished. I figure that's what their using.
Last edited by bark_eater; 08-18-21 at 05:08 AM.
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IMO (and apparently, I'm wrong, and that's okay), I'd never use Calcium, Lime, Descaler solution on aluminum parts. Just my two cents. I use Branson degreaser.
It is a very clever idea, and I'll try it with a larger container. Sprockets above 26T cannot fully fit into my ultrasonic cleaner so I mostly scrub those by hand. This might be my work around. Thanks for posting.
It is a very clever idea, and I'll try it with a larger container. Sprockets above 26T cannot fully fit into my ultrasonic cleaner so I mostly scrub those by hand. This might be my work around. Thanks for posting.
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Last edited by pastorbobnlnh; 08-20-21 at 05:51 AM. Reason: clarity
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The cheap ultrasonic cleaners from Harbor Freight, or similar ones from Amazon, work great for bike parts. Just bite the bullet and buy one - they come in handy for a lot of other things too. For example:
https://www.amazon.com/Industrial-Li...4-135149aa9081
https://www.amazon.com/Industrial-Li...4-135149aa9081
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Cool!
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Skip the WD-40 and buy a can of mineral spirits. The only difference is the 25% mineral oil in the WD-40 that you don’t need and that leaves a film of oil on everything you “clean” with it.
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The whole ultrasonic bath thing for cleaning bicycle parts is pretty silly to begin with. There is nothing on a bicycle that needs to be that clean nor will it stay that clean.
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Pokin' around the Poconos A cold ride around Lake Erie
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Solo Without Pie. The search for pie in the Midwest.
Picking the Scablands. Washington and Oregon, 2005. Pie and spiders on the Columbia River!
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#11
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I like the toothbrush approach cause of the reuse principal and, well I just like handling stuff and getting greasy!
#12
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I use the toothbrush approach with great success. The only thing I can't clean to my satisfaction is the inside of rear derailleur bodies.
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Chevron 325 solvent was the go to. Unfortunately not available in SoCal any more.
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Clean is good.
Immaculately clean is more a statement about the cyclist than the bike.
Unless it is a bike for Show over Road.
Immaculately clean is more a statement about the cyclist than the bike.
Unless it is a bike for Show over Road.
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Ultrasonic cleaners
I would have agreed with this statement until about a year ago. For decades I had used mineral spirits, WD-40, degreasers, and lots of various brushes and rags. I was getting sick and tired of it. Last year I bought an ultrasonic cleaner to clean chains, as I was converting all my bikes to hot wax (a decision I'm very happy about). Now that I have the ultrasonic, I use it all the time for other parts and love it. No more breathing fumes, and little or no scrubbing. Saves time and does a better job. No more accumulation of stinky used mineral spirits.
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Respectively, I disagree. I'd replace my ultrasonic cleaner in a fast second if it stopped working.
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For aluminum parts in the ultrasonic cleaner, I've had great success using this: https://www.aircraftspruce.com/catal...s/09-00810.php
I usually fill the cleaner with water, and place parts and solvent in ziplock bags. Uses less solution, and keeps the debris contained.
The cleaner's heating option alone is sufficient is many cases, as any resilient grease wipes right off.
I usually fill the cleaner with water, and place parts and solvent in ziplock bags. Uses less solution, and keeps the debris contained.
The cleaner's heating option alone is sufficient is many cases, as any resilient grease wipes right off.
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What about using an ultrasonic toothbrush...? Best of both worlds...
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So I guess my old coffee can filled with 2" of Coleman Lantern Fluid is too basic...? Even if I swirl it?
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#23
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I would just disassemble most rear derailleurs for proper cleaning. Usually it's the pulleys that need cleaning. The rest, meh, I rarely detail-clean the entire derailleur body with cotton swabs, etc., since they'll be dirty again after a couple of rides. So far with those I've disassembled the only tricky bit was winding the spring back up. But, sure, tossing a disassembled RD into an ultrasonic cleaner would be handy.
Main reason I'd consider an ultrasonic cleaner is for chains so I could resume waxing. I like riding waxed chains. I just don't like the initial cleaning to get the factory lube off the new chain. I'm in an apartment, so most solvents are out.
Main reason I'd consider an ultrasonic cleaner is for chains so I could resume waxing. I like riding waxed chains. I just don't like the initial cleaning to get the factory lube off the new chain. I'm in an apartment, so most solvents are out.
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Any one got a recommendation for an ultrasonic cleaner? The Amazon/chinamart units all look about the same. I was going to get a 10l one with mechanical control knobs in the hope that simpler is better for long term durability.
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Last edited by bark_eater; 08-19-21 at 05:32 AM.
#25
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The time that this approach shines is for a restoration/renewal of a customer's vintage bike. They appreciate the showroom cleanliness, even if it won't last with the bike's eventual use.