Part three -
Hardware Restoration - PreliminaryThis applies to nuts, bolts, screws, washers and other small steel parts like clips and brackets. My intent was to do a lot of items with a minimum of hands-on labor as I had 4 Mustangs at the time.
1 I got a five gallon bucket of Mustang parts from an auto dismantler about every other month for the last 20 years. As I empty the bucket, I sort hardware into screws and bolts, nuts and washers, special parts, non-metallic parts and everything else. In this and every following step, if the part is broken, threads damaged, too much corrosion or beyond use – I toss it.
2 Soak all hardware in solvent such as Berrymans B12 for a week. I use coffee cans with holes punched in the bottoms and a small chain as a handle in a paint can, with a lid, with the Berrymans. I also have a 5 gallon metal bucket with Berrymans to strip paint from medium size items. Keep a lid on it.
3 After a week in the solvent and while still in the coffee can, rinse in soapy water, as in a deep sink where the laundry water goes using the laundry water.
4 Empty can on a shop towel and allow to air dry for a couple of days. The items will be dirty but the paint and crud will be soft. Put more hardware in the can and return to the Berrymans.
5 I use a two drum rock tumbler (Thumbler’s Tumblers - got the idea from my Postman) using the metal filings from brake shoes and rotors as a cleaning (abrasive) media, to clean most of the crud and rust off the parts. Your friendly local tire store is the source of the filings. Don’t put wet, moist or damp items in with the metal filings, everything will rust. It takes between two and five days at 24 hours a day to tumble parts clean. A week’s worth of tumbling won’t harm most metal parts. Use a straining screen (TP Tools) to separate the filings and hardware when done. I get about four loads (a months use) then toss the filings. On clips with the plastic/rubber insulation you may have to remove the plastic by hand and then return to the tumbler.
6 Dip tumbled items in kerosene to remove filing dust and to give a protective coating to prevent rust. Do not use paint thinner or gasoline.
7 Allow to air dry for a day or two.
8 Sort into containers for whatever you want to do next, phosphate and oil, paint, clear zinc plate, gold zinc plate or cadmium plate.
9 An Eastwood Vibratory Tumbler is an asset. I use TSP (Tri-Sodium Phosphate available from Home Depot) and water with the Eastwood green pyramids.
10 What doesn’t work “well” is a wire wheel. It’s time consuming and will tear up your fingers.
Sources: -TP Tools & Equipment
www.tptools.com Bead blasting cabinets, blasting media, restoration tools, paint
- Eastwood
www.eastwood.com Bead blasting cabinets, blasting media, restoration tools, paint, vibratory tumblers, chemicals
- Thumbler’s Tumblers
http://thumlerstumbler.com/ Rock tumblers.