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#1
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I use paint thinner and an old tooth brush to clean my bike chain.
Is there anything I can spray on the chain to dissolve the thinner or do I have to manually rub it off with a rag? I am open to recommendations to anyone who actually uses one of those chain cleaners. Thanks, Andy |
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#2
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On Mon, 2 Sep 2019 11:51:18 -0700 (PDT), AK
wrote: I use paint thinner and an old tooth brush to clean my bike chain. Is there anything I can spray on the chain to dissolve the thinner or do I have to manually rub it off with a rag? I am open to recommendations to anyone who actually uses one of those chain cleaners. Paint thinner is a solvent (mineral spirits) and is rather slow to evaporate. Solvent Evaporation Rate Strength (Minutes) (KB Value) Denatured 91% Alcohol 3 Limited Solvency VM & P Naphtha 4 38 Lacquer Thinner 2 100 Paint Thinner or Mineral Spirits 60 35 Toluene 3.5 105 Xylene 12 98 Acetone 1 Infinite MEK 2 Infinite Turpentine 40 55 Kerosene 325 30 Some of the above are banned in the People's Republic of California by the VoC Ban. If you want a fast clean, with low residue, methinks acetone would be the best bet. Mixing it with paint thinner isn't going to do anything useful. When the acetone evaporates, what's left is the paint thinner, which will then slowly evaporate. You might also want to try lacquer thinner. However, the modern stuff is a mix of other solvents, which can vary: https://ecolink.com/info/differences-between-lacquer-thinner-11-lacquer-thinner-48-and-lacquer-thinner-51/ Both acetone and lacquer thinner will attack plastics, rubber, and some paints. If the area where you're working has any of these, don't use these solvents. 91% IPA alcohol is evaporates quickly and is probably good enough. While you're at it: 1. Use gloves 2. Read the safety warnings 3. Use a respirator or do your cleaning outdoors. 4. Think about buying a parts washer: https://www.harborfreight.com/20-gal-parts-washer-with-pump-60769.html https://blastercorp.com/product/parts-washer-solvent/ -- Jeff Liebermann 150 Felker St #D http://www.LearnByDestroying.com Santa Cruz CA 95060 http://802.11junk.com Skype: JeffLiebermann AE6KS 831-336-2558 |
#3
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On Monday, September 2, 2019 at 12:38:12 PM UTC-7, Jeff Liebermann wrote:
On Mon, 2 Sep 2019 11:51:18 -0700 (PDT), AK wrote: I use paint thinner and an old tooth brush to clean my bike chain. Is there anything I can spray on the chain to dissolve the thinner or do I have to manually rub it off with a rag? I am open to recommendations to anyone who actually uses one of those chain cleaners. Paint thinner is a solvent (mineral spirits) and is rather slow to evaporate. Solvent Evaporation Rate Strength (Minutes) (KB Value) Denatured 91% Alcohol 3 Limited Solvency VM & P Naphtha 4 38 Lacquer Thinner 2 100 Paint Thinner or Mineral Spirits 60 35 Toluene 3.5 105 Xylene 12 98 Acetone 1 Infinite MEK 2 Infinite Turpentine 40 55 Kerosene 325 30 Some of the above are banned in the People's Republic of California by the VoC Ban. If you want a fast clean, with low residue, methinks acetone would be the best bet. Mixing it with paint thinner isn't going to do anything useful. When the acetone evaporates, what's left is the paint thinner, which will then slowly evaporate. You might also want to try lacquer thinner. However, the modern stuff is a mix of other solvents, which can vary: https://ecolink.com/info/differences-between-lacquer-thinner-11-lacquer-thinner-48-and-lacquer-thinner-51/ Both acetone and lacquer thinner will attack plastics, rubber, and some paints. If the area where you're working has any of these, don't use these solvents. 91% IPA alcohol is evaporates quickly and is probably good enough. While you're at it: 1. Use gloves 2. Read the safety warnings 3. Use a respirator or do your cleaning outdoors. 4. Think about buying a parts washer: https://www.harborfreight.com/20-gal-parts-washer-with-pump-60769.html https://blastercorp.com/product/parts-washer-solvent/ Solvents to remove solvents? Is that a thing? If he chooses to use alcohol, what should he use to remove that? Is it solvent infinite regress? And then there is Plan B: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KM6mzE5lQ0w He has an accent. Believe him. -- Jay Beattie. |
#4
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AK wrote:
I use paint thinner and an old tooth brush to clean my bike chain. Is there anything I can spray on the chain to dissolve the thinner or do I have to manually rub it off with a rag? I am open to recommendations to anyone who actually uses one of those chain cleaners. Thanks, Andy Time. Time “dissolves” paint thinner. |
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On Monday, September 2, 2019 at 2:48:33 PM UTC-5, jbeattie wrote:
On Monday, September 2, 2019 at 12:38:12 PM UTC-7, Jeff Liebermann wrote: On Mon, 2 Sep 2019 11:51:18 -0700 (PDT), AK wrote: I use paint thinner and an old tooth brush to clean my bike chain. Is there anything I can spray on the chain to dissolve the thinner or do I have to manually rub it off with a rag? I am open to recommendations to anyone who actually uses one of those chain cleaners. Paint thinner is a solvent (mineral spirits) and is rather slow to evaporate. Solvent Evaporation Rate Strength (Minutes) (KB Value) Denatured 91% Alcohol 3 Limited Solvency VM & P Naphtha 4 38 Lacquer Thinner 2 100 Paint Thinner or Mineral Spirits 60 35 Toluene 3.5 105 Xylene 12 98 Acetone 1 Infinite MEK 2 Infinite Turpentine 40 55 Kerosene 325 30 Some of the above are banned in the People's Republic of California by the VoC Ban. If you want a fast clean, with low residue, methinks acetone would be the best bet. Mixing it with paint thinner isn't going to do anything useful. When the acetone evaporates, what's left is the paint thinner, which will then slowly evaporate. You might also want to try lacquer thinner. However, the modern stuff is a mix of other solvents, which can vary: https://ecolink.com/info/differences-between-lacquer-thinner-11-lacquer-thinner-48-and-lacquer-thinner-51/ Both acetone and lacquer thinner will attack plastics, rubber, and some paints. If the area where you're working has any of these, don't use these solvents. 91% IPA alcohol is evaporates quickly and is probably good enough. While you're at it: 1. Use gloves 2. Read the safety warnings 3. Use a respirator or do your cleaning outdoors. 4. Think about buying a parts washer: https://www.harborfreight.com/20-gal-parts-washer-with-pump-60769.html https://blastercorp.com/product/parts-washer-solvent/ Solvents to remove solvents? Is that a thing? If he chooses to use alcohol, what should he use to remove that? Is it solvent infinite regress? And then there is Plan B: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KM6mzE5lQ0w He has an accent. Believe him. -- Jay Beattie. Thanks for the video. It is very helpful. Andy I did find a homemade water based cleaner recipe that worked well. 8 oz. water 1 Tbsp Vinegar 1 Tbsp Baking Soda 1 Tsp Dish Soap |
#6
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On Monday, September 2, 2019 at 8:51:20 PM UTC+2, AK wrote:
I use paint thinner and an old tooth brush to clean my bike chain. Is there anything I can spray on the chain to dissolve the thinner or do I have to manually rub it off with a rag? I am open to recommendations to anyone who actually uses one of those chain cleaners. Thanks, Andy Stop doing that. No chain is worth using that filthy stuff. Lou |
#7
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On Monday, September 2, 2019 at 2:38:12 PM UTC-5, Jeff Liebermann wrote:
On Mon, 2 Sep 2019 11:51:18 -0700 (PDT), AK wrote: I use paint thinner and an old tooth brush to clean my bike chain. Is there anything I can spray on the chain to dissolve the thinner or do I have to manually rub it off with a rag? I am open to recommendations to anyone who actually uses one of those chain cleaners. Paint thinner is a solvent (mineral spirits) and is rather slow to evaporate. Solvent Evaporation Rate Strength (Minutes) (KB Value) Denatured 91% Alcohol 3 Limited Solvency VM & P Naphtha 4 38 Lacquer Thinner 2 100 Paint Thinner or Mineral Spirits 60 35 Toluene 3.5 105 Xylene 12 98 Acetone 1 Infinite MEK 2 Infinite Turpentine 40 55 Kerosene 325 30 Some of the above are banned in the People's Republic of California by the VoC Ban. If you want a fast clean, with low residue, methinks acetone would be the best bet. Mixing it with paint thinner isn't going to do anything useful. When the acetone evaporates, what's left is the paint thinner, which will then slowly evaporate. You might also want to try lacquer thinner. However, the modern stuff is a mix of other solvents, which can vary: https://ecolink.com/info/differences-between-lacquer-thinner-11-lacquer-thinner-48-and-lacquer-thinner-51/ Both acetone and lacquer thinner will attack plastics, rubber, and some paints. If the area where you're working has any of these, don't use these solvents. 91% IPA alcohol is evaporates quickly and is probably good enough. While you're at it: 1. Use gloves 2. Read the safety warnings 3. Use a respirator or do your cleaning outdoors. 4. Think about buying a parts washer: https://www.harborfreight.com/20-gal-parts-washer-with-pump-60769.html https://blastercorp.com/product/parts-washer-solvent/ -- Jeff Liebermann 150 Felker St #D http://www.LearnByDestroying.com Santa Cruz CA 95060 http://802.11junk.com Skype: JeffLiebermann AE6KS 831-336-2558 You must never have used IPA on grease. It does not dissolve grease, it requires an organic solvent. Andy |
#8
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On Mon, 2 Sep 2019 14:05:02 -0700 (PDT), AK
wrote: On Monday, September 2, 2019 at 2:38:12 PM UTC-5, Jeff Liebermann wrote: On Mon, 2 Sep 2019 11:51:18 -0700 (PDT), AK wrote: I use paint thinner and an old tooth brush to clean my bike chain. Is there anything I can spray on the chain to dissolve the thinner or do I have to manually rub it off with a rag? I am open to recommendations to anyone who actually uses one of those chain cleaners. Paint thinner is a solvent (mineral spirits) and is rather slow to evaporate. Solvent Evaporation Rate Strength (Minutes) (KB Value) Denatured 91% Alcohol 3 Limited Solvency VM & P Naphtha 4 38 Lacquer Thinner 2 100 Paint Thinner or Mineral Spirits 60 35 Toluene 3.5 105 Xylene 12 98 Acetone 1 Infinite MEK 2 Infinite Turpentine 40 55 Kerosene 325 30 Some of the above are banned in the People's Republic of California by the VoC Ban. If you want a fast clean, with low residue, methinks acetone would be the best bet. Mixing it with paint thinner isn't going to do anything useful. When the acetone evaporates, what's left is the paint thinner, which will then slowly evaporate. You might also want to try lacquer thinner. However, the modern stuff is a mix of other solvents, which can vary: https://ecolink.com/info/differences-between-lacquer-thinner-11-lacquer-thinner-48-and-lacquer-thinner-51/ Both acetone and lacquer thinner will attack plastics, rubber, and some paints. If the area where you're working has any of these, don't use these solvents. 91% IPA alcohol is evaporates quickly and is probably good enough. While you're at it: 1. Use gloves 2. Read the safety warnings 3. Use a respirator or do your cleaning outdoors. 4. Think about buying a parts washer: https://www.harborfreight.com/20-gal-parts-washer-with-pump-60769.html https://blastercorp.com/product/parts-washer-solvent/ You must never have used IPA on grease. Actually, I have. It works well at dissolving hydrocarbon based non-polar greases. It's also good for removing silicon grease from CPU's and heat sinks. Not so good as a pre-wash for removing grease stains. It does not dissolve grease, it requires an organic solvent. Andy Alcohol is an organic solvent because it contains carbon linked to hydrogen, oxygen, or nitrogen (except for carbonates, cyanides, carbides, etc). https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Isopropyl_alcohol ...it is used widely as a solvent and as a cleaning fluid, especially for dissolving oils isopropyl alcohol vs degreaser https://singletrackworld.com/forum/topic/isopropyl-alcohol-vs-degreaser/ IPA is a solvent, it dissolves grease (and water, and anything else) into itself, so you can wipe it away. Degreaser is a surfactant, so it allows the grease/oil to form microscopic globules in the water, which you then wash or wipe away. Its essentially concentrated soap. Both will do the same job, but degreaser works better at stripping large amounts of gunk off drivechains as the degreaser and oil form an emulsion, which you can then wash away. If you put IPA in a chain cleaner youd just be diluting the oil and it still wouldnt wash off. IPA works best for removing small amounts of gunk, or where you dont want to leave a trace of soap/water afterwards for example cleaning calipers and levers after bleeding brakes, or sloshing around in suspension forks to remove the last traces of the old oil and any dirt. By the way, you're welcome. -- Jeff Liebermann 150 Felker St #D http://www.LearnByDestroying.com Santa Cruz CA 95060 http://802.11junk.com Skype: JeffLiebermann AE6KS 831-336-2558 |
#9
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On Monday, September 2, 2019 at 12:48:33 PM UTC-7, jbeattie wrote:
On Monday, September 2, 2019 at 12:38:12 PM UTC-7, Jeff Liebermann wrote: On Mon, 2 Sep 2019 11:51:18 -0700 (PDT), AK wrote: I use paint thinner and an old tooth brush to clean my bike chain. Is there anything I can spray on the chain to dissolve the thinner or do I have to manually rub it off with a rag? I am open to recommendations to anyone who actually uses one of those chain cleaners. Paint thinner is a solvent (mineral spirits) and is rather slow to evaporate. Solvent Evaporation Rate Strength (Minutes) (KB Value) Denatured 91% Alcohol 3 Limited Solvency VM & P Naphtha 4 38 Lacquer Thinner 2 100 Paint Thinner or Mineral Spirits 60 35 Toluene 3.5 105 Xylene 12 98 Acetone 1 Infinite MEK 2 Infinite Turpentine 40 55 Kerosene 325 30 Some of the above are banned in the People's Republic of California by the VoC Ban. If you want a fast clean, with low residue, methinks acetone would be the best bet. Mixing it with paint thinner isn't going to do anything useful. When the acetone evaporates, what's left is the paint thinner, which will then slowly evaporate. You might also want to try lacquer thinner. However, the modern stuff is a mix of other solvents, which can vary: https://ecolink.com/info/differences-between-lacquer-thinner-11-lacquer-thinner-48-and-lacquer-thinner-51/ Both acetone and lacquer thinner will attack plastics, rubber, and some paints. If the area where you're working has any of these, don't use these solvents. 91% IPA alcohol is evaporates quickly and is probably good enough. While you're at it: 1. Use gloves 2. Read the safety warnings 3. Use a respirator or do your cleaning outdoors. 4. Think about buying a parts washer: https://www.harborfreight.com/20-gal-parts-washer-with-pump-60769.html https://blastercorp.com/product/parts-washer-solvent/ Solvents to remove solvents? Is that a thing? If he chooses to use alcohol, what should he use to remove that? Is it solvent infinite regress? And then there is Plan B: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KM6mzE5lQ0w He has an accent. Believe him. -- Jay Beattie. I often remove alcohol - from the bottle and into a nice glass. Cabernet is good Bordeaux as well. But I think that he has the idea that when he cuts the grease he needs to wash the solvent off in some manner with all of that sludge. And the answer is a very strong soap and hot water. Use rubber gloves since most dishwashing detergent is designed to cut all oil and will take all of the oils out of your skin and fingernails. In automotive supply stores they have an extremely strong detergent that is in a blue bottle. Rather than using paint thinner on a chain, you put about a cup full of that stuff in a 4 sup measuring cup and put your dirty chain in there and let it sit for 15 minutes and then wash it off with a hose into the gutter. DO NOT let that stuff touch your hands since it makes dishwashing detergent look like spring water. |
#10
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On Mon, 2 Sep 2019 11:51:18 -0700 (PDT), AK
wrote: I use paint thinner and an old tooth brush to clean my bike chain. Is there anything I can spray on the chain to dissolve the thinner or do I have to manually rub it off with a rag? I am open to recommendations to anyone who actually uses one of those chain cleaners. Thanks, Andy Most paint thinners evaporate. i,.e. dry. Which is, of course, how they work a "paint thinner" :-) -- Cheers, John B. |
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