Rust removal with Muriatic Acid is effective and effortless. Avoid the mistake I did, avoid the disaster! I used muratic acid from Ro-Tyme. Commercial Grade 20º Baume (31.45%).
I really like how you edited your video to keep everything in, including your original happy ending, before showing us the disaster. Lots of people would have taken out their “mistake” and just made this a “how to” video. Instead you keep it real. 👍
Anyone reading this , dry immediately after washing the parts clean of acid, then dry again with a hair dryer or blow lamp to eliminate ALL water from crevices, buff with clean rag and IMMEDIATLEY oil or paint otherwise as others have said parts will flash rust in minutes
@@delatroy don’t do that with muriatic acid at all. It’s highly corrosive, gives off dangerous fumes and can’t be healthy for whatever you plan to keep in that barn.
@@michaelpaciello7669 while the appropriate safety precautions need to be taken while using anything corrosive, the fumes do not linger in the way you're assuming. The barn would not become contaminated because muriatic acid was used, but it's not best option for that type of job imo. Using a pressure washer to remove the rust, replacing any rusty screws, treating the entire surface with a rust inhibiting primer, then painting would be better for a barn.
@@delatroy We used to paint large metal structures like water towers and bridges. Most paint was sandblasted and sometimes chemicaly stripped. \Never I mean never strip more surface area than you can prime seal the same day. Microscopic surface rust sets in almost immediatel it may not even be visible. The next day do another section and prime what you stripped. Once all areas are primed you can sand clean and topcoat. If you don't do this you will have rust immediately starting under the new paint job.
Be sure to neutralize the acid, with Sodium bicarbonate (baking soda) or Amonia. Then, immediately coat the bare metal surface with a protective barrier like oil, or primer if you plan to paint it.
Very useful information regarding the impact on metal items from just the fumes from rags containing Muratic acid. I also learned this the hard way after placing a tightly sealed one gallon jug of muratic acid in a metal cabinet only to open it a week later to find a rusty interior of the cabinet and rust on the power tools stored inside.
Like Carl gangl said, you need to OIL everything to keep it from rusting. that's why manufacturers will often have everything covered in oil when you get it. My lathe requires oil regularly to protect against rust
Here's a little story. I once was etching a concrete floor with acid at work. I left the unsealed acid container in my work truck. It fell over and leaked a small amount on tge floor. My work truck was closed and locked for several days while I was on vacation. When I returned there was literally a cloud in my truck when I opened the door. The acid caused slight corrosion on all the bare metal inside the cab of this truck. As for this guy. Wash the part in baking soda before drying. Dispose of the acid laden rags. Hermetically seal any containers having acid. If you have bare metal it's a good idea to coat it so it does not rust if a period of time passes before it will be painted or have other metal conditioning.
I derusted some parts at work in a large automotive garage, left the bucket under a bench and forgot about it. Tool boxes, benches, electrical outlets & conduit started rusting all over the shop. I had to quietly dispose of the stuff before anyone knew it was me who caused the mess.
You mentioned breathing the fumes and the need to use a mask. What you need is an acid gas rated respirator, or preferably such a respirator and adequate ventilation. Also, removing rust by this method might be problematic for the spring as it can make the steel more brittle. The rest of the parts are thick enough that hydrogen embrittlement of the surface is unlikely to be a serious issue. It is nice to see proper buttress threads on the screw, which is a detail often missed for parts today. It is a stronger thread profile in one direction, so it is used in that case in the direction that the screw is tightened.
i used acid to clean some old machinist calipers and dividers, the results were the spring steel piece where the legs squeeze on a pinion the spring just fell into two pieces.
Thanks for the good video. A few comments. Acid + base = salt + water. The natural antidote to (muriatic acid) hydrochloric acid is sodium hydroxide (lye). Muriatic acid + lye = table salt + water. Water does not neutralize, only dilutes. Hydrogen chloride vapors irritate the respiratory system and corrode everything nearby in seconds! In industry, the process is: after degreasing, rust removal with hydrochloric acid and then immediately rinse thoroughly. If the intention is to elektroplate, there is no need to neutralize, because the elektroplating continues in the acid. But if the intention is to paint, you must immediately neutralize with alkali (NaOH) and then rinse with plenty of water and dry with hot air. Inorganic acids produce interesting results. If you neutralize acetic acid with calcium carbonate (washing soda), you get calcium acetate Ca(C2H3O2)2. When heated, it decomposes into acetone and calcium carbonate.
Muriatic acid is very potent stuff, water alone is not enough to netralize the acid. You'll need a mixure of baking soda and water afterwards but even then there's a chance the metal will flash rust and continue go brown afterwards.
@@adrianrouse5148yes I agree. From my experience, do not use indoors, lathe bed, drill press, some tools will turn brown and start to rust. I have done body parts by putting a mechanic cloth on panel, then pour or brush acid on. When cloth turns brown, remove. Repeat as necessary. Neutralize with baking soda, dry and paint immediately
Acid cleaned steel will flash rust very quick so the second you have neutralize it you need to spry the parts with some oil type WD40, or if you are supposed to paint it just do a quick base cote with primer.
Is it necessary to rub baking soda water on parts to neutralize or can you just immediately dry and spray with primer. I’m getting contradicting info. Thanks.
@@beenheredoneit.4381 thanks! Can that be done by way of a spray bottle with baking soda/ water mixture? Or does the part need submerged/ soaked in baking soda water?
You can buy a gallon for around 12 bucks at home depot with a ~30% concentration. No need to dilute and it's safer to handle. $1.25 ammonia at dollar tree to neutralize it and lots of cheap scrubbers and containers.
Flash rust is a thing, but note how the part that wasn't in the acid didn't rust? Yeah, water alone won't neutralize the acid, use a baking soda water mix, then rinse with plain water after. I made that mistake before, it's a learning process. Love how you had the success and failure together. So many fake people would have edited out the mistake, respect.
Neutralize with baking soda solution, let dry but quickly oil, paint or spray a coat of clear on it. They will stay shiny! Been there done that. Always wear a 3M respirator with filters. Been there done that.
Thanks. I want to remove rust on an old farm shed. I want to use the acid but I’m worried that it will seep into the soil and make it toxic. How can I be safe or is there another way?
@@josealejandromartinezlopez3924 You add the baking soda to the container the acid is in. If its a small container, pour it in a bigger one with alot of water. Baking soda & acid causes kind of a volcano of fizz & fumes. Best to do it outside.
@@josealejandromartinezlopez3924 Have a separate bucket ready with a solution of baking soda and water to neutralize the acid on the part you are cleaning.
This guy took too many risks moving containers and using it inside also strings to pull out the parts. What went wrong is after you rinse make a solution of water and baking soda and neutralize the acid on the parts by dipping them, have a second bucket of baking soda and water to do a final dip. Then when you have the parts clean and dry use a oil base enamel paint, or clean the parts with acetone or lacquer and prime them immediately for painting. Then you are good to stop the rust from returning. Most important be careful, this stuff is dangerous to breathe, wear the appropriate mask and eve protection with gloves.
Muriatic acid leaves a greasy residue and just rinsing won't get it off. I wouldn't use too much making soda, Ph neutral is around 7.6, Muriatic acid has a Ph of 1 and baking soda or sodium bicarbonate a Ph of 8.4. It will neutralise it as mentioned plenty of times before but I've personally always had success by simply cleaning with an industrial degreaser and then a pressure washer. On concrete and metal. Bare steel needs to be covered afterwards once dried, oil based primers with an anti rust additive work great.
Hey man, it's all good. I know you feel like you wasted some time, and its never fun to have to deal with unexpected problems, but it wasn't wasted. It was probably the best spent time in the whole ordeal. Afterall, for the majority of the video, youre doing exactly what you intend to do, nothing more nothing less. However the part where you're de-rusting it for the second time and feeling that disappointment...just think of that little bit of disappointment/inconvenience as the small price to pay for the confidence of knowing that you'll never make that same mistake again.
Great video on the using the m. Acid. Electrolysis still produces hydrogen gas which is very very flammable. What I liked about the m. Acid, the process was really quick. I can’t see myself waiting hours on the electrolysis or the vinegar to work. I’ll spend the extra time on safely using the m.acid 👍🏻
I can tell you what went wrong! You should have coated the newly derusted parts with a light oil like WD40 to avoid the flash rusting that happened overnight. It would have still ocurred even without the remnants of rubbish left in the rubbish bag.
That depends a lot on the humidity. The main thing that happened here is that he did not actually neutralize the acid. Cleaning it in water is not going to remove the acid. Then, if the humidity is fairly high, it needs coating, oil or phosphoric acid or a primer. If it's not that humid (like winter/spring conditions) then it's not going to flashrust. Ofc it's also important to completely dry the parts, a towel or cloth is usually not enough so it should be dried with hot air or a torch.
@@TheChrisey I've used a product called PHIX: Spray, brush, or soak to 1) totally dissolve the rust, 2) etch and zinc plate the cleaned metal surface, and 3) phosphate coat the zinc, leaving the surface totally prepped and ready to paint, oil, or polish. It seems to avoid the flash rust.
Good advice to me, do not leave it in the garage to work, use it in warmer weather. I was aware of the neutalization required of all acids, even vinegar. Just to be safe I will store the container out of doors. I will use my respirator for sure as well. Cherish your most important tool, your well working body!
It may be a bit redundant, but I think I would pull the parts out. Neutralize them in baking soda and water. Before I did any kind of brushing at all, when dealing with acid. You can always throw them back in if they are not done.
when you acid bath the metal it strips it bare. in that it will rust instantly! take it out of the acid and neutralize in baking soda, dry and either paint or coat in oil to keep it from rusting again rapidly.
im not a chemist, yet it was explained to me that with acid less or diluted can work very well, full strength acid the molecules are like having to many cooks in one kitchen they impede each others activity, the acid reacts with the metal along with water, now if you want shake a little table salt into it also it can help
Or hydrochloric acid if you want the more accurate chemical name. Muriatic acid is an old fashioned term meaning "pertaining to brine or salt" (Wikipedia) which really has little to do with its modern production. A term used more for historic reasons than anything else. Sometimes also called Spirits of salts. If you walk into a hardware shop here to buy Muriatic Acid they will look at you blankly. I suspect that Muriatic Acid usage in the US is a bit like Imperial v metric. Sometimes the US has a bit of difficulty keeping up with the times.
The problem is not disposing the left item. The problem is when those things after it gets treated with muriatic acid come in contact with air , oxygen it corrodes.
A couple more options are electrolysis and/or warm vinegar with salt added. Keep an eye on small parts when using the vinegar method. I ruined a small auger bit by leaving it in the solution too long. Chlorine will cause you the same problems when left open around tools and such. 👍🍻
i used pure acid. The parts were clean in 20 minutes. I washed them with water, and dried them with a clean cloth. I saw the beginning of rust, very faint rust. I laid an open carton, and immediately painted all. A week later I looked. Wherever paint had not reached, was rusted again. So, back to the acid soon, wash with water, and hang objects on metal wire to see all nooks and crannies, then paint again. Oh, the smell of acid or by product of acid eating the rust - I got a brief but really nasty hit. Seems to burn through my nose tissue. Will never forget it. Nobody will.
It is best to neutralize with baking soda in the water. Plain water would have to be changed a few times with long soaks. This would most likely reflash your rust. Baking soda neutralizes the acid in all the nooks and crannies very quickly so a ten minute soak in warm water with soda will be very effective. Then one rinse in pure water and quickly drying the items seems to work the best. After wire wheeling wipe them off and coat with an oil. I like to heat them to three or four hundred degrees and then quench in oil.
PPS: Also gets rid of the moisture quickly and thoroughly. Longer it sits on or in the metal the more oxidizing occurs. Lots of O2 in water able to combine with the metal for rust, much more than air.
Baking soda neutralizes acid. I am a professional auto technician 20+ years and whenever a battery leaks that’s in a trunk that’s what we use to neutralize the acid and clean up. I personally wouldn’t open a bottle of any type of acid without a big box or bag of baking soda in the event of a spill or something. Might be better ways to neutralize I’m not a chemist but I wanted to say this so maybe it helps someone avoid an emergency.
Those fumes are insidious. 1 gal jug, 41%, lid on tight: inside 48' x 60' shop w 20' walls (large interior volume) all my stuff was rusting. Lid was not fully sealing despite being tight. Put it outdoors and solved the problem.
Sodium Bicarbonate (baking soda) will neutralise the acid as already mentioned, but what I did notice was that the black plastic bag was covered in water droplets..With the cold temperatures do you have a problem with condensation?…Uninsulated sheds and garages suffer really badly in winter, especially the ones with metal roofs, to the point where they are dripping with water..Temperature plays a massive part when doing this kind of work..
Anyone who knows at least a bit of chemistry would know, remove items from the HCl, wash with water, neutralise in an alkaline solution of sodium bicarbonate, rinse again, then oil or paint.
muriatic acid leaves an oxide layer behind and will keep eating metal use baking soda water. i use muriatic to copper plate and sometime with electrolysis (use graphite for anode)
Three things: 1) Neutralize the acid on the iron by putting them in a baking soda or drain unclogger + water solution for a few minutes, or scrub them down with oven cleaner (fume type). Then soap wash. This will prevent rust flash, and also the rust won't develop under any paint you might use. (Water alone does not neutralize anything.) 2)) Don't acid-bath springs!!! This will cause a change in the metallurgy and also cause stress concentrations. Just buff them off. 3) Those plastics like what the bucket is made of don't get affected by Muriatic acid. However, some plastics disintegrate in short order. Best to keep this in mind.
I had a neighbor with a gallon of muratic acid that had a pin hole leak onto a wood bench and didn't know it. It ate a hole in the bench and the fumes caused any fine steel that was nearby to rust in a matter of a couple weeks. Almost a disaster. It's thought me to even bag the jug with some heavy plastic if I store it. I pretty much use the Evaporust now, fairly safe even though it takes a little more time. 👍
Where I bought from, they had it wrapped in a thick thick THICK plastic bag. This chemical must be kept out side! Away from any kids! I don’t use this product anymore. It’s a great product but too dangerous.
@@Quinteros777 Yeah, I keep mine at the end of the garage by the door in a thick plastic bag also. ANY leak can be a disaster. If the stuff wasn't handy to have once and while I would just buy and discard. The good thing is no kids around anymore and ifthat were the case I'd just not keep it around at all. Seeing first hand what just the fumes can do convinced me the stuff is dangerous like a lot of acids.
HI. When you wash your part, did you use a water pressure washer to cleaned deep any acid ? Also, before painting, I highly recommend to paint with zinc (spray can or using a gun LPLV) to repel any humidity and protect against rust.
After removing rust, I rinse with water, then a baking water solution, If I'm going to paint it? I rinse with HOLDTIGHT solution ( stops flash rusting for about a day). If I'm not going to paint, I final rinse with WD-40, I also ruined some metal in my shop just from the fumes the first time I used it, USE ONLY OUTSIDE!
You better to use phosphoric acid. It won't clean rust as muriatic acid did, but it turns rust and bare steel surface to black coating that prevents further rust. Similar to the way aluminum "rust" protects layer under it. You don't event have to neutralize exces acid. Just let it dry.
After you clean parts in acid, immediately rinse in hot water, then wash in hot water and detergent and scrub vigorously. Rinse again in hot water and dry in a oven. Get the parts good and hot to evaporate any water and it will also evaporate any traces of acid that may have soaked into the castings. After cooling paint immediately or oil parts that require lubrication. The acid is both your friend and your enemy. It can make impossible cleaning easy but you have to work very fast to eliminate it or the parts will rust worse than ever.
Liked your good video presentation but you failed to oil your parts afterwards. Just plain old wd40 spray will protect or if in a pinch motor oil rubbed on.
I don't think it was the acid fumes. I think it was just moisture in the air flash rusting the freshly etched metal. You got fresh acid etched bare steel. Any bit moisture is gonna make it rust right away.
I found out if you wash/soak it in the gasoline right after taking out from the muriatic acid. all the left over acid from the rusted product will end up at the bottom of the bucket since it s heaviest comparing to petrol (gasoling) . Take it out , gasoline will evaporate and you ll end up with clean product ..paint over or buff it .
The rust didn't come from the acid whatsoever. This happens when you get metal down to a bare surface and leave it exposed to moisture. It's the same reason your brake discs will get a coat of orange surface rust overnight if it's raining. Bare metal parts need to be covered in either paint or oil almost immediately after cleaning.
Used Muriatic Acid for 25 years. Safety first. Use full strength or 50/50 water based. If soaking at full strength it has to monitored. Will eat the part. I usually will brush acid on non precision car parts. If the part had ground or machine surfaces use sparingly. Or use cleaning vinegar. Some parts I full on full strength. Trailer axle, trailer springs, lawn mower deck, snowblower housing, car rims. Parts of machine finish to use a lighter acid to clean. Crankshaft on lawnmower or snowblower.can put electrical tape on ground finishes and do the counterweights with Muriatic. Always be careful. Bottom line.
Water DOES NOT neutralize acid. Only a base neutralizes acid,. You should have taken your parts from the acid, rinsed them in water and then put them into a base to completely neutralize the acid. You could skip the step of rinsing with water and go straight from acid to base. After that, you must protect the metal to prevent it from rusting.
4 года назад
You forgot to neutralize the acid with vinegar or some kind of agent. All of my parts look amazing I use a 2k clear coat on them which seals the metal.
the rule of thumb is that Bases are Slippery. If you are wondering whether it is an acid or a base. if its slippery it doesn't mean its a base, but if it *isn't* slippery it is almost definitely not a base (ie, the thing that neutralizes an acid) (and an acid neutralizes a base). Soaps, toothpaste, baking soda in water, bleach ...slippery... base. Citrus juice, Stomach acid, Milk, coffee... not slippery = acids.
My friend ~ IMPORTANT! Water alone does NOT neutralize muriatic acid! You must add a fair amount of BAKING SODA to the water. Also, distilled water is preferable.
You got it right, you neutralize the acid with sodium carbonate and water then hit it with oil to prevent flash rust. When your ready for paint hit it with acetone to clean off the oil on the parts that are to be painted that simple.
I need to remove heavy rust from steel base columns . So if I understand. 1. MIX 1 cup acid + 1 cup water with baking soda. 2. Spray 3. Rinse with water 4. Dry really good and 5. W40 or primer. I am right? Thanks
fastest result. heat it up till it nearly boils. reason for this is due to how chemicals work faster when the atoms collide more often, which is the effect of higher temperature. this is in relation to how far away from absolute zero the temperature is though so even at near freezing the acid will still work quite well. though not as well as when it is near boiling. minuscule difference when speaking about 20 degrees C.. so yea. sort of waste effort unless you are absolutely gung ho on saving a little bit of time. the way to really make the reaction faster is by concentration, meaning don't delude the solution too much. it is probably already deluded. !! Important Always Always Always, safety first. You can buy gas filters for that gas mask.
Baking soda is a Base. Vinegar is an Acid... they are opposites. Baking soda neutralizes Vinegar, it is *precisely* what you use to neutralize acids... so mixing it with Vinegar won't make your solution stronger it will make it weaker.
@@ryansenger408 when I have to clean an old n very crusty burnt up stove/ oven to make ready for next renter or find cool tools but are ruined letting it set between scrubbing works very well... But it maybe the grit in the soda .
1 Minute in and you already messed up! For that bucket I would only use about a cup of muriatic acid. If you used that whole jug you made it way too strong. You should agitate the parts occasionally otherwise the parts touching will not be treated. You DID NOT rub the surface with oil or a light coat of paint. YOU MESSED IT UP!... Yup you are the problem!.... ALKA-BOOST? SERIOUSLY? All you had to do was lightly coat the surface with oil or spray a light coat of paint on the parts. You're just over thinking way too much!
yup that's muriatic acid for you, and that's why I only use Phosphoric acid, I painted a hood of my truck after stripping it with Muriatic acid, neutralized it with baking soda after and still it rusted in less then a year after being primered and painted, trust me it wasn't that you left those other items in the shed, Muriatic acid does not prevent rust, that's why hot rodders use it to build up fake rust patina, it will actually rust things
Baking Soda Bro. It's the only way to neutralize the acid. Not water but baking soda water solution. They said oil I prefer WD40, more or less there is going to be many more after me saying this.