vinegar and baking soda will clean many things :) combine them for a real bubbly / peroxide effect, you can even clean some things with peroxide for a more bleaching type action, also if you have an ice chest you forgot about and it got a nasty smell to it, make a paste of baking soda and vinegar to scrub it, then rinse with plain water, then rub down with plain baking soda then rinse with plain water :) depending on how bad it stinks redo till there's no smell :)
1. Vinegar WILL NOT eat the normal metal. It will separate oxygen from iron (rust) but not iron from iron or iron from carbon (steel).
2. YOU NEED to neutralize the acid (vinegar) on the part after soaking. Simple as dunking in some water with baking soda (best method). If you don't, any remaining acid on the part WILL CAUSE IT TO RUST AGAIN QUICKLY. Rinsing is not good enough.
I use 50% acetic acid at work to clean parts. Vinegar is same, but 5%.
@TheAnalGorilla Thanks for the info. I haven't had any problem yet with rust, however it is still very "pitted" on that one area from the heavy rust that was on it. Thanks again.
@TheAnalGorilla I have an old chromoly bicycle the has some tuff spots to get to that have some surface rust. Im going to try soaking the frame in vinegar to get it out. Do you think it would harm the chromoly plating, if not would I mix water, and baking soda for the after vinegar soak?Any help?
@GoColts8263 These were made in the states, when products were built to last. That's why I try to purchase "old" tools. The metal, etc. was much better and will last. Made in China is junk, I agree. I'd rather pay a little more for quality than try to save a buck or two.
@GregoryHouseMD1 That stuff does work well. I do have a can of rust remover. I was just showing how to remove rust with a "non-chemical" approach. Vinegar is a common household product that is safe to use. I was just experimenting. The rust on this old tool was very bad, it actually ate away some of the metal on the blade. Thanks for viewing and the comment.
@aleiakay I looked it up from the website you posted here. It had a green plastic/rubber handle which is not on there anymore. Thanks so much for the info. I didn't realize it was that old.
@GregoryHouseMD1 Its also a lot cheaper then buying Metal Rescue. The amount of vinegar he used was probably only worth about .50 cents as apposed to spending $50 on a gallon of Metal Rescue.
when you are done, you can dump the vinegar on weeds to kill them
psychobunny32 1 week ago
now sand it while its inthe viniger :P
andrew1jl 2 weeks ago
You should have put a primer first and sanded it to make it smooth and it would have turned out perfect IMO...still a good looking tool...Congrats =]
ecko90044 3 weeks ago
@Qubeetubee LOL. I've had that for several years, it was a gift for one of my kids, just never opened it. I'd be embarrassed.
CampLiberty1989 2 months ago
vinegar and baking soda will clean many things :) combine them for a real bubbly / peroxide effect, you can even clean some things with peroxide for a more bleaching type action, also if you have an ice chest you forgot about and it got a nasty smell to it, make a paste of baking soda and vinegar to scrub it, then rinse with plain water, then rub down with plain baking soda then rinse with plain water :) depending on how bad it stinks redo till there's no smell :)
aleiakay 2 months ago
@aleiakay Thanks for the comment and watching the video. Take care.
CampLiberty1989 2 months ago
Hey, chemist here. Two things:
1. Vinegar WILL NOT eat the normal metal. It will separate oxygen from iron (rust) but not iron from iron or iron from carbon (steel).
2. YOU NEED to neutralize the acid (vinegar) on the part after soaking. Simple as dunking in some water with baking soda (best method). If you don't, any remaining acid on the part WILL CAUSE IT TO RUST AGAIN QUICKLY. Rinsing is not good enough.
I use 50% acetic acid at work to clean parts. Vinegar is same, but 5%.
TheAnalGorilla 3 months ago 4
@TheAnalGorilla Thanks for the info. I haven't had any problem yet with rust, however it is still very "pitted" on that one area from the heavy rust that was on it. Thanks again.
CampLiberty1989 2 months ago
@TheAnalGorilla I have an old chromoly bicycle the has some tuff spots to get to that have some surface rust. Im going to try soaking the frame in vinegar to get it out. Do you think it would harm the chromoly plating, if not would I mix water, and baking soda for the after vinegar soak?Any help?
TommyPickle74 1 week ago
Yes this whisk kwick trim was for afro style cuts in the 70s...
thra5herxb12s 4 months ago
My God, are you high? Turn your god dam tv off when making videos!!! Thank you and have a nice day.
GoColts8263 5 months ago
Rust and China are bad. mmmkay?
GoColts8263 5 months ago
@GoColts8263 These were made in the states, when products were built to last. That's why I try to purchase "old" tools. The metal, etc. was much better and will last. Made in China is junk, I agree. I'd rather pay a little more for quality than try to save a buck or two.
CampLiberty1989 2 months ago
most of the new tools in the market today are made in china and they are bad equipment.
ayattiubing 5 months ago
@ayattiubing Agreed. Thanks for watching.
CampLiberty1989 2 months ago
Not bad, But why didnt you use the metal rescuse? the liquid stuff that removes rust..
GregoryHouseMD1 7 months ago
@GregoryHouseMD1 That stuff does work well. I do have a can of rust remover. I was just showing how to remove rust with a "non-chemical" approach. Vinegar is a common household product that is safe to use. I was just experimenting. The rust on this old tool was very bad, it actually ate away some of the metal on the blade. Thanks for viewing and the comment.
CampLiberty1989 6 months ago
@CampLiberty1989 i did a search, having a hard time posting, going to try again jwissandsons com /1960s /A-191 .pdf
aleiakay 2 months ago
@aleiakay I looked it up from the website you posted here. It had a green plastic/rubber handle which is not on there anymore. Thanks so much for the info. I didn't realize it was that old.
CampLiberty1989 2 months ago
@CampLiberty1989 you're welcome :) my family also prefers the old usa made products
aleiakay 2 months ago
@GregoryHouseMD1 Its also a lot cheaper then buying Metal Rescue. The amount of vinegar he used was probably only worth about .50 cents as apposed to spending $50 on a gallon of Metal Rescue.
Anexreject 4 months ago
@Anexreject
That makes sense! Will this also work on cars? :D
GregoryHouseMD1 4 months ago