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Soaking that engine block overnight in the hot caustic tank used to do the job but EPA shut
down those tanks many years ago in all the places I know of.
Then there’s the burn out ovens, and bead blasting afterwards that a lot of shops are using
now a days, but that doesn't always get a clogged water jacket clean and that’s an added
expense when rebuilding a driver, not a race engine.
So what options are open to the homebuilder? Well there is always a case of gunk engine
degreaser and the pressure washer. Works pretty good᠁..but that cold water really doesn’t
cut it and even at 3,000psi it just skips over the really caked on cold crud. The stuff that’s
left in a water jacket after a half century of use is a compilation of rust, lime and concentrated
glycol from years of boiling the green stuff.
http://www.pbase.com/dennygraham/image/161644119
Heard lot of guys say to use Muriatic acid, but any acid is nasty stuff to be messing with
especially in your back yard with a pressure washer.
So᠁.I’ve physically dug out as much as I can with screwdrivers, coat hangers and special
¼” scoop I made and tomorrow I’m loading the block on a skid in the back of the truck and
filling the water jacket with Purple Power then driving down to the local car wash where I
can get some high pressure hot soapy water.
dg

Last edited by Denny Graham; 10/22/2015 3:11 AM.

Denny G
Sandwich, IL
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I can attest to this being a problem. The last 4 rebuilds I have done, the machine shop (two different shops) left so much crud in the water jacket that the rear drain was clogged either partially or completely. Even after I made special mention of this prior to the work being done. I am sure yours will come out fine since you are doing it yourself. Nothing like feeding thick safety wire into the drain hole after the freeze plugs are installed and working to a successful outcome!


Deve

1950 Chevy 3100 Deluxe Cab
1950 Chevy 3100 Standard Cab
In the Stovebolt Gallery
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Kettle Custodian (pot stirrer)
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55 gallon drum
Water
3 cans of lye
1/2 box of Tide laundry detergent
Firewood

Dunk the block and head in the barrel, fill with water, add lye and detergent, fire it up. After about 4-6 hours, pull the parts out and hose them down with the pressure washer. DO NOT put pistons or anything else aluminum in this stuff- - - -you won't see them again!
Jerry


"It is better to be silent and be thought a fool than to speak and eliminate all doubt!" - Abraham Lincoln
Cringe and wail in fear, Eloi- - - - -we Morlocks are on the hunt!
There is nothing noble in being superior to your fellow man; true nobility is being superior to your former self. - Ernest Hemingway
Love your enemies and drive 'em nuts!
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'Bolter
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Had an uncle that brought some JD engine parts over one time the
looked like they had just come from the foundry. How'd you get
them looking that good I axed, Lye he says.
But.......Lye is just about as bad as acids are, just at the
other end of the scale.
My question always is, how does one dispose of these caustic
substances once you're done with them????

dg


Denny G
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Same way you deal with an endangered species- - - -shoot, shovel, shut up! A power posthole digger and 100 acres works very well for lots of things, including gun bluing salts and used-up caustic cleaning solutions.
Jerry


"It is better to be silent and be thought a fool than to speak and eliminate all doubt!" - Abraham Lincoln
Cringe and wail in fear, Eloi- - - - -we Morlocks are on the hunt!
There is nothing noble in being superior to your fellow man; true nobility is being superior to your former self. - Ernest Hemingway
Love your enemies and drive 'em nuts!
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Bubba - Curmudgeon
Bubba - Curmudgeon
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"Same way you deal with an endangered species- - - -shoot, shovel, shut up!"

" . . . no penalty may be imposed if, by a preponderance of the evidence that the act was in self-defense. The law also eliminates criminal penalties for accidentally killing listed species during farming and ranching activities."

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'Bolter
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I can't let that one slip by guys, to close to my basic beliefs.
Call me an treehugger, environmentalist, animal rites advocate
or what ever....I like to drink the water that I'm pumping
out of my well rather than buy $1 a bottle mountain stream
from the Jewel. And, I like for the deer, beaver, coons,
squirrel, birds, pets, neighbors kids and who ever needs to
walk my land, to be able to walk it with out fear of being
shot or shoveled over or poisoned.
In my 73 years I've seen the wild areas and wild life around
northern Illinois destroyed by the invasion and over
population of non caring human species. This 40 year old
commercial says it all, and nobody seemed to get the idea:


Denny Graham
Sandwich, IL


Denny G
Sandwich, IL
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Bubba - Curmudgeon
Bubba - Curmudgeon
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Denny, I hope you did not read my post wrong. I am in complete agreement with you.

If it is not good enough that laws are being broken, it comes down to a belief that we not only have dominion over the earth/nature, we more importantly have a role of stewardship.

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J
'Bolter
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as far as cleaning,my engine shop boiled the block for days,
cam out very clean,removed built up sludge

unfortunately ,it also revealed a water jacket crack that had been sealed by that same gunk

Thank goodness there was still a good engine stitcher around

on the other subject,disposal is one of the reasons certain jobs are being done by shops instead of at home


just-a-hacker


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Several years ago my brother and I ran a gun refinishing business. We attended a very large machine gun shoot as venders. Mainly did military firearms and Lots of them quickly due to BATF rules and the fact guys didn't like to leave machine guns laying around. We had to clean firearms very quickly and I do mean clean as parkerizing will not stick to oily, dirty firearms. We used heated Sodium Hydroxide from a company called Brownells. When done after several 12 hour days we disposed of that solution. But before we did we'd mixed it with mild acid solution call vinegars to adjust the ph. This neaturalized the solution so it didn't kill the bunnies, yeah like they were going to make it on a machine gun range. Poured it through a cheese cloth filter to remove greasy solids. Think about it guys, how does industry get rid of chemicals used to clean, pickle, etc. metals?


Six volt guy living in a twelve volt world
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Baking works best after a good chemical clean. All the left-over crud just crumbles right off. Check with local speed shops/engine builders.
Very hard to get the inside water passages clean otherwise.


1947 GMC Truck 5 window, Long Bed
2008 Corvette Roadster
2008 Harley Davidson FXDL
2011 F150 Ecoboost 4X4
2015 Subaru Outback AWD
"only the strong survive"
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Muriatic (hydrochloric) acid is not effective as a degreaser, and should not be used to clean metal because it causes rapid rusting.


Lye (sodium hydroxide) is nontoxic. It is even used in food products. Just because something is caustic doesn't make it toxic.

Sodium hydroxide is an environmentally-friendly alternative to solvents for degreasing and methylene chloride (aircraft remover) for paint stripping.

The environmental/disposal issue encountered when using sodium hydroxide is caused by presence of the crud being removed in the waste liquid, not by the presence of sodium hydroxide.

One could dispose of the waste by first neutralizing the sodium hydroxide with hydrochloric acid. Sodium hydroxide + hydrochloric acid = table salt + water. The neutral liquid could then be evaporated to produce solid waste that could be disposed of in your regular trash.

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White vinegar.

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Thanks for the lesson in chemistry Sput, never could get a handle on that branch of science.

dg


Denny G
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Does anybody eat olives, or hominy? Both are processed in lye!
Jerry


"It is better to be silent and be thought a fool than to speak and eliminate all doubt!" - Abraham Lincoln
Cringe and wail in fear, Eloi- - - - -we Morlocks are on the hunt!
There is nothing noble in being superior to your fellow man; true nobility is being superior to your former self. - Ernest Hemingway
Love your enemies and drive 'em nuts!
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What I don't get is, I want to pay a competent machine shop to do a competent job on the machine work. When they tell you outright that part of that includes a thorough cleaning of the entire block, I do not understand why there is a crapload of crud to the point where the rear drain is totally blocked after they have installed the freeze plugs. I do not want to deal with chemicals. That is why I pay upwards of 2 grand to have someone else deal with it. Took me an hour last time (the 4th total) this happened to rig safety wire to get it unplugged. (you KNOW I didn't get it all) I think it's a mindset on my part.. as a business owner, I give everything plus 100% of everything I advertise. We are dinosaurs, I know, but wasn't that a better time?


Deve

1950 Chevy 3100 Deluxe Cab
1950 Chevy 3100 Standard Cab
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Other wise they're a hard as a rock and bitter as all get out.
Back when I was a dumb kid in the service, there were olive
groves where I was stationed. I had the bright idea that I was
gonna just stop along side the road and pick me a bag full
because I love green olives. I soon found out they have to be
processed and Jerry's right, the lye is one type of cure that
softens them so they are edible.

dg


Denny G
Sandwich, IL
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Originally Posted by Hotrod Lincoln
Does anybody eat olives, or hominy? Both are processed in lye!
Jerry
Ever wonder how they skin Mandarin oranges?
No, they don't use little Chinese people with gentle fingers.
Momentary soak in lye solution.
(After the soak they may use little Chinese people to finish the job. I don' know.)
Carl


1952 5-window - return to "as built" condition | 1950 3100 with a 235 and a T-5 transmission
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What I wonder about is how the squirrels get the Hickory
nuts out of those shells. I've spent hours just trying
to get enough Hickory meat to fill a thimble.

Got the engine cleaned up and clean water flowing from the
jacket with the pressure washer stuffed in every hole I can
find. Can't find any more crud in the bottom fishing around
with iron tools either.
Got suckered into using the wand at the car wash, thought it
was supposed to be hot water...it wasn't and I blew ten
bucks worth of quarters on about 10 minutes of pressure.
Should have just stayed at home with my can of gunk and
3,000lb sprayer.

Tried Purple Power Bruce....dint touch the grease. Neither
did the "Engine Degreaser" at the car wash. Good old Gunk
engine cleaner, kerosene and a good stiff brush still
works the best.

Need to find some good long brushes to get back in the oil
galleys. I'm thinkin' a trip to Gander Mountain for gun
cleaning brushes or better yet, McMaster Carr? Nope, just
thought of all those Harbor Freight brush sets that I got
a box full of. Just have to figure out some kind of holder
for the twisted wire and how to get the wires out when
they fall apart.

dg



Last edited by Denny Graham; 10/23/2015 11:33 AM.

Denny G
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I use rifle brushes and pieces of steel round stock drilled and tapped to screw them into. Most gun cleaning rods just aren't strong enough unless you buy the really expensive ones.

To soften the grease before you use the pressure washer, mix up a strong solution of Trisodium Phosphate and water, and brush it on liberally, then wait a few minutes before pressure washing. It's the powder that's used to clean grease stains off concrete shop floors and it's MUCH less expensive than commercial engine degreasers.
Jerry


"It is better to be silent and be thought a fool than to speak and eliminate all doubt!" - Abraham Lincoln
Cringe and wail in fear, Eloi- - - - -we Morlocks are on the hunt!
There is nothing noble in being superior to your fellow man; true nobility is being superior to your former self. - Ernest Hemingway
Love your enemies and drive 'em nuts!
Joined: May 2009
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T
'Bolter
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At this point I think all that is probably left is at the bottom of the water jacket, so to keep the chemicals to the minimum I would plug the lower holes and put the chosen chemical in the block and let it work for awhile, drain, rinse and then hit it with the pressure washer. If you have some of that crud in the picture left put some of it in a container and see what happens with a couple different chemicals. I have had good luck with muriatic but it is dangerous stuff. I like the lye idea and may experiment some with that. We used to use lye to get the butterfat out of milking equipment years ago, I had forgot about that.
I replied to Sput because that is some really useful information.


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'Bolter
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Good thinkin' BIZ, that is, trying solvents on that crud I
pulled out. I can fish around in the jacket and can't feel
any thing any more.
I've used phosphoric acid for stripping rusty parts. Behr
concrete cleaner used to contain Phosphoric Acid but they
changed the formula and took out the acid. I was having a
hard time finding anything with a high concentration of
Phosphoric in it till I ran across some Sterosol Milkstone
remover at a farm store. 75% solution. That would clear out
the rust once the greasy stuff was clear.
http://www.pbase.com/dennygraham/image/161664566
dg


Denny G
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I have to admit I pretty much gave up on the last one I did, my thoughts were that I got a lot of it, most of the heat is higher in the cylinder, and even with the bottom of the water jacket plugged up there was no apparent damage to the block.


1949 3100
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I am not certain about this, but I think that leaving that hardened crud in the bottom of the water jacket leads to the classic crack in the water jacket scenario. I had a 216 develop that crack in the middle of the summer when my original type brass bellows t-stat decided to stick in the closed position on the highway, causing the temp gauge to peg. Upon tearing the engine down, I discovered that the horizontal crack and the top of the crud inside of the water jacket where at the same level.
Coincidence?
Carl


1952 5-window - return to "as built" condition | 1950 3100 with a 235 and a T-5 transmission
Joined: Sep 2001
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Bubba - Curmudgeon
Bubba - Curmudgeon
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Coincidence?

It has often been suggested that the first place to get a crack from frozen coolant is that thinnest area of the block?

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'Bolter
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If you notice, not many of the third generation Chevy sixes
have problems with cracked blocks or cracked heads.
Those first and second generation Stovebolts were cast from
gray iron and were thick and was not a totally homogeneous material.
It's true that the cracks usually show up in the thinnest read
weakest, section of the block from a freeze, that just makes
sense from a structural stand point. The cracking that is
quite common in the cylinder heads are most often stress
cracks in areas of the combustion chamber where the most
stress concentration is present.
I worked as a parts man in the early 60's during the transition
from the 2nd generation to the 3rd generation sixes. The new
blocks with cast from a much more highly refined iron than
the earlier blocks were. Any one that has worked with both
engines knows how much lighter the later blocks are. Ford had
been using the process for some years in their V8's before
GM adopted it. If my memory serves me right the technology
was compacted graphite cast iron which is lighter and
stronger than gray cast iron, making the alloy a more
attractive alternative to the latter in the production
of cylinder blocks.
dg

Last edited by Denny Graham; 10/26/2015 11:32 AM.

Denny G
Sandwich, IL
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Denny;

Have you ever been able to feed your Stovebolt E-Free gas to prove your theory? I think I would try and mount a small temporary fuel tank and give it a test. I'd bet that you are correct in your assumption.

SimS

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I think you might be addressing the other thread where the
discussion was about a hesitation or stumble when you hit the
throttle. I don't think it's just the alcohol in the gas
that's causing the problems. I believe it's in the formulation
as a whole.
I built and flew a biplane when I lived at an airport, and we
had 100LL and leaded auto fuel at the pumps. Some of the
planes had been been certified to use leaded auto gas. I tried
a couple of tank fulls in my 216 and it made no noticeable
difference.
That for a while caused me to think that it wasn't the fuel
but some other mechanical problem with the carburetors. But
the leaded auto fuel that was approved for some planes was
also coming out of the same refinery as the E-10 and subject
to similar refining chemistry. The aircraft have a mixture
adjustment on the throttle and they are adjusted much to the
same effect that I get when I apply a small amount of choke
to the truck carb. So again, the new cars computer adjusts the
mixture, the mixture is adjusted by the pilot on an aircraft
engine and the old truck carburetors have to be re-jetted.

DG


Denny G
Sandwich, IL

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