MattF
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(Dammit, I wrote a whole thread about this restoration but didn't think this forum would be so interested!)
Not everyone on here are welders you know.


(Dammit, I wrote a whole thread about this restoration but didn't think this forum would be so interested!)
Didn't everyone know that pure water is an insulator and it's only contaminants that conduct electricity?
Yeah, i've heard so many people saying that water is an excellent conductor of electricity. They are often shocked when i tell them it isn't.
Not my experience.Electrolysis requires line of sight between sacrificial anode and cathode. Foam will interfere with the process. Much better to suspend items so they don't touch the anode.
S.
Since I have only been blasting relatively crude and badly rusted items, I haven't bothered with the subtleties of the process. The idea is to fix the underlying oxide layer by converting it back to iron. Too many amps and the new surface layer will be a dusty coating rather than a solid reconstruction but if there's no detail on the piece, I wouldn't worry about it and the process will complete within a day.
The "line of sight" between the anode and cathode is the typical path the current will take and if there is something in the way, a stronger current will blow the surface off one area while reconstructing the other. Probably worth considering if its a machined flat surface where the slight patterning might show. Most of my stuff gets hit with an aggressive wire wheel afterwards (vices, heavy machine castings etc) but more delicate parts with for example engraved or etched lettering would benefit from lower current over a longer time.
There's no reconversion back to iron. Oxide will remain exactly that. It may change state somewhat, but it will still be oxide. Unless you're plating, what's gone is gone and nothing gets added.
The oxide (aka rust) gets reduced back to pure iron. However, if the part is badly rusted, as iron expands when it rusts, the rust will have pushed the iron away from the parent metal and it may flake off.
There's no reconversion back to iron. Oxide will remain exactly that. It may change state somewhat, but it will still be oxide. Unless you're plating, what's gone is gone and nothing gets added.
The line of sight thing is a misnomer. It doesn't matter whether there's line of sight or not. If electrolyte is touching all of the piece, the whole surface will conduct. It's simply that any electron flow will always take the easiest path, but in an electrolysis setup there is no direct path, so the piece will derust overall regardless. It may merely take longer for certain portions to derust, but derust they will.
Err, but there is! The underlying iron oxide otherwise known as magnetite will revert to iron and if it does that gradually, that new layer will be shiny and new under the black magnetite which will rub off. You are effectively electroplating the surface with material from the steel anode.
Used a small pc power supply to do lathe dial. Its a small item so used a spray can cap as the container. Had an outer bearing race perfect size, used that as anode, with dial sitting ontop/inside. Markings are stamped rather than etched, so no damage. Used some old rag as a spacer... Pb batterys use fiberglass between the plates, anything thin and porus will do. Added quite a bit of salt. On 12v it wanted 20 amps. 5v was quite a bit less, but still only needed half hour.