Seadog
Save the planet. It's the only one with rum!
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I sloshed around some cellulose thinners to get rid of any water
You should have used meths. Cellulose thinners is immiscible with water, as far as I recall.
I sloshed around some cellulose thinners to get rid of any water
ok never thought about the reaction with the zinc, knowing little of chemistry. had a quick look at it, and apparently it can also form hydrogen, so you did right not to use it... think I'll do it in two stages, rattle it first remove the worst, empty it then try the acid on it's own.I didn't want to use normal nuts as the zinc plating would react with the acid & partially neutralise it.
After the acid I rinsed the tank well with water followed by a baking soda mix to neutralise any remaining acid then a final rinse with hot water. I sloshed around some cellulose thinners to get rid of any water followed by some petrol. Unfortunately the tank did flash rust slightly so maybe a rinse with phosphoric acid after the citric would prevent this?![]()
. Sitting on the shelf in my garage is a bottle of central heating protector solution (not the cleanser) and that must contain corrosion inhibitor and one bottle protects the whole system for some time, so must be quite effective. I wonder if adding a little drop of that stuff in to citric might be an interesting thing to try; it's on my "to do" list.Sitting on the shelf in my garage is a bottle of central heating protector solution (not the cleanser) and that must contain corrosion inhibitor and one bottle protects the whole system for some time, so must be quite effective. I wonder if adding a little drop of that stuff in to citric might be an interesting thing to try; it's on my "to do" list.
Yes, the first time I ever heard of using citric to clean off scale was a report back in the 1980's describing its use in power station boilers; you'd certainly want something in those that was not too aggressive on the metal. I think one of the factors that make citric good, is that it is relatively easy to flush away after cleaning, whereas some other agents take repeated fill-drain cycles to get to down to safe levels.Oddly enough...
I recently flushed my central heating system with one of those bfo Scalebreaker pumps borrowed from work.
To give things a little boost in the cleaning department I mixed 1kg of citric acid in 3L of water and added that. It didn't half loosen up more stuff.
.So far, I've never cleansed by 40 year old CH system.
I usually wipe with IPA to try get rid of water and avoid flash rusting, but some steels really want to rust.
Re flash rusting, and the other issue of the citric beginning to attack metal after it has taken off the rust; I've been wondering about whether having a corrosion inhibitor present might be good, but neither Tesco nor Ocado don't seem to do inhibitors. Sitting on the shelf in my garage is a bottle of central heating protector solution (not the cleanser) and that must contain corrosion inhibitor and one bottle protects the whole system for some time, so must be quite effective. I wonder if adding a little drop of that stuff in to citric might be an interesting thing to try; it's on my "to do" list.
Thanks for the earlier comments re using flour for gelling; will try that.
When I first moved in to this house, if I vented a radiator, black water came out; it was pretty scary. I think I drained and re-filled it a couple of times, and then refilled with Fernox protector, and have replaced that every couple of years. These days, if I vent a rad, or if I drain the system, the water that comes out is clean and colorless, and I guess that too is a reason I've not put in a cleanser so far.
When I first moved in to this house, if I vented a radiator, black water came out; it was pretty scary. I think I drained and re-filled it a couple of times, and then refilled with Fernox protector, and have replaced that every couple of years. These days, if I vent a rad, or if I drain the system, the water that comes out is clean and colorless, and I guess that too is a reason I've not put in a cleanser so far.
How did it go?OK chaps this lot will be going in first, can I chuck them all in at once or is it best to do a few at a time?
View attachment 296346
How did it go?
Has anybody used oxalic acid as opposed to citric? That’s what I’ve always used although I can’t remember what started it off. How do they compare?
Oxalic acid will remove all iron not just rust, so it will eat into your partHas anybody used oxalic acid as opposed to citric? That’s what I’ve always used although I can’t remember what started it off. How do they compare?
It's the compound which makes Rhubarb leaves, and green potatoes, poisonous.Not 100% sure, but think oxalic might be slightly toxic.
Green potatoes
