Solvent for degreasing/cleaning?
#1
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Solvent for degreasing/cleaning?
I worked very briefly at a bike shop and miss almost nothing about it, except the cleaning station. It was like a water fountain but with mineral spirits (?) or some other kind of solvent you could just dunk stuff in. The grease would wash away like my problems when I get to the third or fourth tequila.
I guess the closest I can get is to get a Tupperware tub and fill it with solvent at home. But I don't know what's the optimal solvent.
Any help is appreciated.
Thanks!
I guess the closest I can get is to get a Tupperware tub and fill it with solvent at home. But I don't know what's the optimal solvent.
Any help is appreciated.
Thanks!
#2
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I like the stuff from Finish Line.
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#3
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Mineral spirits works, but crown brand camp stove fuel at Walmart is a lot cheaper.
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#4
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I believe mineral spirits is what most shops, auto included, use in parts washing bins like you described. It works well, but my favorite has long been diesel fuel.
I initially started using diesel as a place I lived at had an attached diesel service shop so there was an abundance of the stuff. Even now that I have to buy it, it's extremely cheap. I wear gloves now, but back when I didn't, I found that my skin reacted somewhat to mineral spirits but didn't to diesel.
Diesel and a tooth brush will get any gunk off of any bicycle part. I eventually got my brother to like the stuff so he now keeps some at his bike shop.
Did I mention it's cheap? Prices are all over the place for mineral spirits, but it looks like you can get a gallon container for maybe 15-20 bucks. By contrast, diesel in California is a bit over 4 bucks per gallon, even less in pretty much any other state. I've got a half gallon container I'll fill up two to three times a year, and that's only because a good portion of it gets used to light camp fires in my fire pit.
I initially started using diesel as a place I lived at had an attached diesel service shop so there was an abundance of the stuff. Even now that I have to buy it, it's extremely cheap. I wear gloves now, but back when I didn't, I found that my skin reacted somewhat to mineral spirits but didn't to diesel.
Diesel and a tooth brush will get any gunk off of any bicycle part. I eventually got my brother to like the stuff so he now keeps some at his bike shop.
Did I mention it's cheap? Prices are all over the place for mineral spirits, but it looks like you can get a gallon container for maybe 15-20 bucks. By contrast, diesel in California is a bit over 4 bucks per gallon, even less in pretty much any other state. I've got a half gallon container I'll fill up two to three times a year, and that's only because a good portion of it gets used to light camp fires in my fire pit.
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Odorless mineral spirit is safer to use as well. Flash point of stove fuel is about 0°F. Odorless mineral spirits has a flash point close to 100°F. It also has less aromatic compounds in it which means it’s less toxic (chronic toxicity, not acute).
Odorless mineral spirits is what Safety Klean uses in their cleaning systems.
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#6
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Diesel has an even higher flash point, around 150F.
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That's correct. Camp stove fuel (Coleman, Crown, etc.) are basically gasoline without the additives and just as dangerously flammable. OMS and Kerosine are both safer and just as effective as degreasers.
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Another advantage of Odorless Mineral Spirits is that most of the gunk from the used solvent settles to the bottom of the container after a couple days and the good stuff can be poured into a clean container and used over and over again. Wipe out the leftover gunk with a rag and throw in the trash so nothing goes into the ground or the sewage system.
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We used diesel for a long time before it got banned from all of the big races here in the states in about '05. For the last bunch of years my favorite without a doubt has to be Pedro's Degreaser. The one that's kinda thick and amber colored. Works really well, isn't flammable, and is biodegradable.
#10
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I'm going to price a gallon of mineral spirits at Lowes and get a gallon of diesel and see how they compare. Lots of great advice -- much appreciated
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I find if I keep up in my preventative maintenance I can use a lot less OMS with citrus cleaners. Citrus degreasers are considered a rea
sonably sustainable and renewable industrial cleaning solution that is biodegradable, meaning the chemical components will begin breaking down once it is exposed to the air or comes into contact with soil.
sonably sustainable and renewable industrial cleaning solution that is biodegradable, meaning the chemical components will begin breaking down once it is exposed to the air or comes into contact with soil.
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I got into chain waxing a few months ago and finding OMS in southern California has been challenging. I ended up buying a liter from an art supply store (Michaels) for $22. I also ordered a quart from Lowes for $8 a week ago; we will see whether that order gets processed or not. I have not had good experience with citrus degreaser; I previously broke a chain after letting it sit overnight in citrus degreaser.
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#13
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Agreed. Routine maintenance, which includes wiping the dust and dirt off, really helps prevent the gunky buildup which requires some sort of solvent. The number one reason I typically use solvent with a brush is because of someone else's lack of maintenance.
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#14
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Buying cleaning solvent by the quart is far more expensive than by the gallon. I pay about $8.50 a gallon for crown camp stove fuel - half the price of OMS. If gasoline and camp stove fuel are so dangerous, how do I manage to fill up my cars, three lawnmowers and a an emergency generator and not blow myself up. By accounts here, gas stations should be blowing up right and left. Yes, l know that gasoline related fires happen. My workshop has an electric water heater, placed 8 feet above floor level.
I reuse my solvent many times, to minimize the amount I use. Once there's enough oil in it, it won't always light if I throw a match in some, to burn it off.
I reuse my solvent many times, to minimize the amount I use. Once there's enough oil in it, it won't always light if I throw a match in some, to burn it off.
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If gasoline and camp stove fuel are so dangerous, how do I manage to fill up my cars, three lawnmowers and a an emergency generator and not blow myself up. By accounts here, gas stations should be blowing up right and left. Yes, l know that gasoline related fires happen.
No facility to recycle used solvent?
#16
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Gasoline stinks. Get a little on your hands and the smell lasts a long time. Otherwise,it works fine.
If I burn off some old solvent, it's only a few ounces. Not worth recycling.
I have a 2 acre lot with a 2 million dollar house on it. I do all of my own mowing. One honda walk behind for bluegrass, one for rough drainage ditches and a John deere x590 for the pasture. I keep at least 10 gallons of gas on hand.
Never heard of static electricity sparks? That's how some gas station fires occur.
I use a solvent dispensing bottle bottle for my small needs. If I clean a chain, it goes into an old water bottle with maybe 6 ounces of solvent from a plastic storage bottle. All solvent bottles sit in a plastic storage container.
https://www.amazon.com/DeVilbiss-DPC...a-457196293434
I use acids for metal fabrication too. Those are stored in their original gallon jugs, placed in a large plastic storage bin.
If I burn off some old solvent, it's only a few ounces. Not worth recycling.
I have a 2 acre lot with a 2 million dollar house on it. I do all of my own mowing. One honda walk behind for bluegrass, one for rough drainage ditches and a John deere x590 for the pasture. I keep at least 10 gallons of gas on hand.
Never heard of static electricity sparks? That's how some gas station fires occur.
I use a solvent dispensing bottle bottle for my small needs. If I clean a chain, it goes into an old water bottle with maybe 6 ounces of solvent from a plastic storage bottle. All solvent bottles sit in a plastic storage container.
https://www.amazon.com/DeVilbiss-DPC...a-457196293434
I use acids for metal fabrication too. Those are stored in their original gallon jugs, placed in a large plastic storage bin.
Last edited by DaveSSS; 09-15-21 at 03:30 PM.
#17
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I was only addressing your mention of the electric water heater within your workshop, which I had misperceived as an endorsement for safely using volatile solvent within that space. Using a solvent dispensing bottle to dispense only a small amount as needed does limit volatile vapors.
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Stove fuel (aka “white gas”) is not gasoline. It is naphtha which has fewer branched hydrocarbons and a much higher flash point (0°F). It’s more flammable than mineral spirits (typical flash point of 50° to 100°F) but not nearly as flammable as gasoline. It’s much more closely related to kerosene than to gasoline.
The problem is with the “white gas” name. It is not gasoline and if you tried to run it in a gasoline engine…well, don’t. The control module in a modern engine would have a melt down trying to adjust for the knocks and pings you’d experience and would likely blow a rod through the block. Gasoline engines don’t like straight hydrocarbons.
Diesel has an even higher flash point, around 150F.
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Gold Fever Three days of dirt in Colorado
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Solo Without Pie. The search for pie in the Midwest.
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Twisting Down the Alley. Misadventures in tornado alley.
Stuart Black
Gold Fever Three days of dirt in Colorado
Pokin' around the Poconos A cold ride around Lake Erie
Dinosaurs in Colorado A mountain bike guide to the Purgatory Canyon dinosaur trackway
Solo Without Pie. The search for pie in the Midwest.
Picking the Scablands. Washington and Oregon, 2005. Pie and spiders on the Columbia River!
Days of Wineless Roads. Bed and Breakfasting along the KATY
Twisting Down the Alley. Misadventures in tornado alley.
Last edited by cyccommute; 09-15-21 at 06:20 PM.
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The cleaning fluid in the parts washer was stanasol which is a special fluid from the parts washing company that picks it up and recycles it by filtration every few weeks. Pricey to get and use unless you are in a shop environment. There are parts washing machines available from places like harbor freight that can use solvents like the mineral spirits mentioned above. These are a bit of cost involved in up front costs but it will pay for itself in the long run if you are doing enough repairs. Smiles, MH
#20
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The cleaning fluid in the parts washer was stanasol which is a special fluid from the parts washing company that picks it up and recycles it by filtration every few weeks. Pricey to get and use unless you are in a shop environment. There are parts washing machines available from places like harbor freight that can use solvents like the mineral spirits mentioned above. These are a bit of cost involved in up front costs but it will pay for itself in the long run if you are doing enough repairs. Smiles, MH
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cyccommute If my Lowes order of odorless mineral spirits does not come through, and I no longer want to pay >$20/L to an art supply store to buy more, is it more dangerous to use kerosene or naphtha? Both are available as camp fuel from my local REI, and their respective costs are almost the same (~ $8/qt). I generally do my bike maintenance in an attached garage with the garage door open
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been using mineral spirits for about a year after reading about it here. I've rigged 3 chains, 1 at a time, hanging from a wire hanger, hanging at the end of a cord, from the basement ceiling, into a tray of a cpl inches of spirits. simple to adjust the height so that only the bottom of the chain loop is under the surface. then simple to progressively move the loop so that all of it gets rotated & dunked. nitrile gloves & skinny straw brushes get them moving like new & gets the crud off. amazing how resilient that crud can be & how reluctant it is to detach from the chain. when done, raise the chain loop height using knots in the string, then wipe the chain & let dry before lubing. recycle the spirits in a pickle jar. the sludge in the tray gets thrown in recycling w/ the plastic tray. the best trays are certain take out food containers. this technique was so effective on my MTB chain, that it cleared up the chronic chain suck I was getting. oh wait, this wasn't a chain cleaning thread, my bad
#23
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cyccommute If my Lowes order of odorless mineral spirits does not come through, and I no longer want to pay >$20/L to an art supply store to buy more, is it more dangerous to use kerosene or naphtha? Both are available as camp fuel from my local REI, and their respective costs are almost the same (~ $8/qt). I generally do my bike maintenance in an attached garage with the garage door open
Around here I can buy K1 kerosene at the pump at a number of fuel stations.
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I like OMS because it is safe and effective, and can be reused multiple times by letting the particulate matter settle out and decanting clean solvent off the top.
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