[RBW] Re: Solvent tank for drivetrain cleaning

2015-03-02 Thread Brian Campbell
Marc, Home Depot has them in the paint section. It is a bucket designed for 
holding paint.  It is white plastic.

On Sunday, March 1, 2015 at 8:23:19 AM UTC-5, Marc Irwin wrote:

 Where did you find a bucket with a lid tight enough to prevent the WD-40 
 from evaporating?

 Marc

 On Friday, February 27, 2015 at 11:58:15 AM UTC-5, Brian Campbell wrote:

 I use a 2 gallon plastic bucket (has a tight fitting lid) and fill with 
 WD-40. I have a small parts bucket that fits inside. In 5 years, I have had 
 to add about a half a gallon of WD-40. Works really well.
  

 On Thursday, February 26, 2015 at 8:19:30 PM UTC-5, KenP wrote:

 Has anyone thought of using an old crockpot to soak parts in?

 On Tuesday, February 24, 2015 at 1:35:22 PM UTC-5, Jim Bronson wrote:

 Does anyone have a solvent tank for drivetrain parts cleaning?  That 
 seems like the ultimate solution for cleaning greasy parts.  It would be 
 nice to have two chains and just leave one in there all the time.

 The drawbacks are, potential fumes in an enclosed area and they're 
 expensive.

 I found this one on Amazon but it's $205...

 http://www.amazon.com/Gallon-Pressure-Cleaner-Solvent-Electric/dp/B0029443HG

 Plus 20 gallons of solvent, may put this in the category of maybe 
 someday

 I also do some work on my cars though and it would be nice to have for 
 that as well.  So maybe the dual use will justify it ;)

 -- 
 Keep the metal side up and the rubber side down!
  


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[RBW] Re: Solvent tank for drivetrain cleaning

2015-03-02 Thread Beth H

I went digging to find out the status of El Duke degreaser. Since Rivendell 
sells it, I contacted them. Here's what Spencer told me: 

Hi Beth-
The El Duke guy quit making the stuff for a year or so a couple years ago.  
Then he moved to WC and we convinced him to start making it again.  
I think Riv is the one and only place to get it since he does not have the 
time to distribute it all by himself (the El Duke project is a side job).

So there you have it. It's now a smaller side project, and available ONLY 
through RBW in 12 oz. bottles.

Still worth it, if you ask me.

Beth H. 



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[RBW] Re: Solvent tank for drivetrain cleaning

2015-03-01 Thread Marc Irwin
Where did you find a bucket with a lid tight enough to prevent the WD-40 
from evaporating?

Marc

On Friday, February 27, 2015 at 11:58:15 AM UTC-5, Brian Campbell wrote:

 I use a 2 gallon plastic bucket (has a tight fitting lid) and fill with 
 WD-40. I have a small parts bucket that fits inside. In 5 years, I have had 
 to add about a half a gallon of WD-40. Works really well.
  

 On Thursday, February 26, 2015 at 8:19:30 PM UTC-5, KenP wrote:

 Has anyone thought of using an old crockpot to soak parts in?

 On Tuesday, February 24, 2015 at 1:35:22 PM UTC-5, Jim Bronson wrote:

 Does anyone have a solvent tank for drivetrain parts cleaning?  That 
 seems like the ultimate solution for cleaning greasy parts.  It would be 
 nice to have two chains and just leave one in there all the time.

 The drawbacks are, potential fumes in an enclosed area and they're 
 expensive.

 I found this one on Amazon but it's $205...

 http://www.amazon.com/Gallon-Pressure-Cleaner-Solvent-Electric/dp/B0029443HG

 Plus 20 gallons of solvent, may put this in the category of maybe 
 someday

 I also do some work on my cars though and it would be nice to have for 
 that as well.  So maybe the dual use will justify it ;)

 -- 
 Keep the metal side up and the rubber side down!
  


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[RBW] Re: Solvent tank for drivetrain cleaning

2015-03-01 Thread Beth H
Jim -- I use El Duke degreaser (available in 12 oz. bottles at Rivendell: 
http://www.rivbike.com/product-p/gooduke.htm) in one of those pink tubs 
that hospitals used to send patients home with. It's big enough to hold a 
crankset and everything else. I have on hand an assortment of brushes 
ranging from Park tool skinny brush to big fat solvent tank style (fr 
Harbor Freight) to a few old toothbrushes, enough to reach all the nooks 
and crannies in drive-train parts. Since El Duke is plant-based, I don't 
worry about toxins and don't even bother wearing gloves half the time. I 
drop the parts in, let them soak for about twenty minutes, and then scrub 
away. Carthartic and cleansing. 
When I'm done, I remove the parts rinse with hot water, and hang them up to 
dry. I let the liquid in the tub settle, and then I carefully pour off the 
top into a jar; it's usually good for at least one more use (two if it's 
not too gunky and I pour carefully). 
Since discovering El Duke, I no longer use synthetic solvents.

Beth Hamon, Portland OR 
http://www.beth-hamon-music.com

On Tuesday, February 24, 2015 at 10:35:22 AM UTC-8, Jim Bronson wrote:

 Does anyone have a solvent tank for drivetrain parts cleaning?  


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[RBW] Re: Solvent tank for drivetrain cleaning

2015-02-27 Thread hsmitham
Jim,

I just use a plastic wash tub and simple green, works like a charm and 
stores away easy. 

~Hugh

On Tuesday, February 24, 2015 at 10:35:22 AM UTC-8, Jim Bronson wrote:

 Does anyone have a solvent tank for drivetrain parts cleaning?  That seems 
 like the ultimate solution for cleaning greasy parts.  It would be nice to 
 have two chains and just leave one in there all the time.

 The drawbacks are, potential fumes in an enclosed area and they're 
 expensive.

 I found this one on Amazon but it's $205...

 http://www.amazon.com/Gallon-Pressure-Cleaner-Solvent-Electric/dp/B0029443HG

 Plus 20 gallons of solvent, may put this in the category of maybe someday

 I also do some work on my cars though and it would be nice to have for 
 that as well.  So maybe the dual use will justify it ;)

 -- 
 Keep the metal side up and the rubber side down!
  

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[RBW] Re: Solvent tank for drivetrain cleaning

2015-02-27 Thread Brian Campbell
I use a 2 gallon plastic bucket (has a tight fitting lid) and fill with 
WD-40. I have a small parts bucket that fits inside. In 5 years, I have had 
to add about a half a gallon of WD-40. Works really well.
 

On Thursday, February 26, 2015 at 8:19:30 PM UTC-5, KenP wrote:

 Has anyone thought of using an old crockpot to soak parts in?

 On Tuesday, February 24, 2015 at 1:35:22 PM UTC-5, Jim Bronson wrote:

 Does anyone have a solvent tank for drivetrain parts cleaning?  That 
 seems like the ultimate solution for cleaning greasy parts.  It would be 
 nice to have two chains and just leave one in there all the time.

 The drawbacks are, potential fumes in an enclosed area and they're 
 expensive.

 I found this one on Amazon but it's $205...

 http://www.amazon.com/Gallon-Pressure-Cleaner-Solvent-Electric/dp/B0029443HG

 Plus 20 gallons of solvent, may put this in the category of maybe 
 someday

 I also do some work on my cars though and it would be nice to have for 
 that as well.  So maybe the dual use will justify it ;)

 -- 
 Keep the metal side up and the rubber side down!
  


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[RBW] Re: Solvent tank for drivetrain cleaning

2015-02-26 Thread KenP
Has anyone thought of using an old crockpot to soak parts in?

On Tuesday, February 24, 2015 at 1:35:22 PM UTC-5, Jim Bronson wrote:

 Does anyone have a solvent tank for drivetrain parts cleaning?  That seems 
 like the ultimate solution for cleaning greasy parts.  It would be nice to 
 have two chains and just leave one in there all the time.

 The drawbacks are, potential fumes in an enclosed area and they're 
 expensive.

 I found this one on Amazon but it's $205...

 http://www.amazon.com/Gallon-Pressure-Cleaner-Solvent-Electric/dp/B0029443HG

 Plus 20 gallons of solvent, may put this in the category of maybe someday

 I also do some work on my cars though and it would be nice to have for 
 that as well.  So maybe the dual use will justify it ;)

 -- 
 Keep the metal side up and the rubber side down!
  

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Re: [RBW] Re: Solvent tank for drivetrain cleaning

2015-02-25 Thread RoadieRyan
I have been using an ultrasonic cleaner I got on Amazon for the last couple 
years and love it as it gets to all the cracks and crevices I would have a 
hard time reaching with a tooth brush.  It will do almost all of the drive 
train components as well as the stem and seat post (if they aren't too 
long) I do a lot of work on old 10 speeds so it is very handy. It is close 
to this model 
http://www.amazon.com/Kendal-Industrial-Digital-Ultrasonic-Cleaner/dp/B0018IIPFK/ref=sr_1_8?ie=UTF8qid=1424881043sr=8-8keywords=ultrasonic+cleaner
 

On Tuesday, February 24, 2015 at 12:25:37 PM UTC-8, George Schick wrote:

 Another good product from Harbor Freight might be an ultrasonic cleaner. 
  I've always wanted one of those and this one is about the right size with 
 a 2.5 liter capacity.  Should work good with something like Finish Line 
 citrus solvent, which may be diluted with up to 5 parts water.  Would be 
 great for chains.

 http://www.harborfreight.com/25-liter-ultrasonic-cleaner-95563.html


 On Tuesday, February 24, 2015 at 2:15:25 PM UTC-6, Skenry wrote:

 Try this, from Harbor Freight 
 http://www.harborfreight.com/6-1-2-half-gallon-parts-washer-96952.html 
 6.5 gallons and big enough for a crankset with rings attached.   The 
 best washers are heated, but this one is great for normal home use. 
 Scott 

 On Tue, Feb 24, 2015 at 3:09 PM, cyclot...@gmail.com 
 cyclot...@gmail.com wrote: 
  We just got one at the community shop in town bikebbq.com 
  It's huge, takes a while to heat up, but works fantastically. Can put 
 an 
  entire frame inside it! 
  Doesn't work that great for casual use. 
  
  
  On Tuesday, February 24, 2015 at 10:35:22 AM UTC-8, Jim Bronson wrote: 
  
  Does anyone have a solvent tank for drivetrain parts cleaning?  That 
 seems 
  like the ultimate solution for cleaning greasy parts.  It would be 
 nice to 
  have two chains and just leave one in there all the time. 
  
  The drawbacks are, potential fumes in an enclosed area and they're 
  expensive. 
  
  I found this one on Amazon but it's $205... 
  
  
 http://www.amazon.com/Gallon-Pressure-Cleaner-Solvent-Electric/dp/B0029443HG 
  
  Plus 20 gallons of solvent, may put this in the category of maybe 
  someday 
  
  I also do some work on my cars though and it would be nice to have for 
  that as well.  So maybe the dual use will justify it ;) 
  
  -- 
  Keep the metal side up and the rubber side down! 
  
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 Groups 
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[RBW] Re: Solvent tank for drivetrain cleaning

2015-02-25 Thread 'pb' via RBW Owners Bunch
It's worth doing a scan of the ebay results for parts washer:

http://www.ebay.com/sch/Tools-/631/i.html?_nkw=parts+washer

This 3.5 gal bench-top unit sounds like it has the right features, $80 
shipped:

http://www.ebay.com/itm/3-1-2-GaIlon-SM-PARTS-WASHER-Heavy-Duty-Pump-Brand-New-Tool-cleaner-part-wash-/141581927209?pt=LH_DefaultDomain_0hash=item20f6f0c329

I'm tempted, although I manage to get things pretty clean on the bike, in 
the stand, out in the driveway, using Simple Green.  I guess my San Diego 
location helps out with that.   

~pb

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[RBW] Re: Solvent tank for drivetrain cleaning

2015-02-24 Thread 'jinxed' via RBW Owners Bunch
I havent used proper solvent to clean for a while. All I use is a small 
plastic tub of hot water, a bar of Lava soap, and a couple old tooth 
brushes. If the parts are really grimey, I'll spray them with some simple 
green to soak a few minutes before scrubbing. I'll use the tooth brush to 
work up a good lather on the bar of soap and use that to scrub. A quick 
rinse and dry, preferably followed by a good hot sunning on the porch, and 
they're squeaky clean. For the chain, I'll coil it up in a small ziploc 
freezer bag then give it a generous dousing of simple green, seal it up, 
and let it sit while I clean the other parts. Every so often I shake it up 
and flip it over to make sure it's all coated and cleaning. After that, I 
dump it my tub, scrub it with the tooth brush, then rinse and dry it the 
same. Re-lube and reinstall everything and it's like new.

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[RBW] Re: Solvent tank for drivetrain cleaning

2015-02-24 Thread Philip Williamson
I worked with solvent tanks in my youth, and have never once missed them. I 
don't really clean my bike drivetrains, though. 
Let us know if it turns out to be the bee's knees!

Philip
www.biketinker.com

On Tuesday, February 24, 2015 at 10:35:22 AM UTC-8, Jim Bronson wrote:

 Does anyone have a solvent tank for drivetrain parts cleaning?  That seems 
 like the ultimate solution for cleaning greasy parts.  It would be nice to 
 have two chains and just leave one in there all the time.

 The drawbacks are, potential fumes in an enclosed area and they're 
 expensive.

 I found this one on Amazon but it's $205...

 http://www.amazon.com/Gallon-Pressure-Cleaner-Solvent-Electric/dp/B0029443HG

 Plus 20 gallons of solvent, may put this in the category of maybe someday

 I also do some work on my cars though and it would be nice to have for 
 that as well.  So maybe the dual use will justify it ;)

 -- 
 Keep the metal side up and the rubber side down!
  

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[RBW] Re: Solvent tank for drivetrain cleaning

2015-02-24 Thread Jon in the foothills of Central Colorado
I've had this 5 gallon Safety Klean solvent tank since 1985.It's good size 
for bike parts cleaning, including hubs mounted on wheels . Has an easy 
change filter and last time I checked they will exchange the reservoir with 
fresh cleaner fluid. The reservoir separates from the top and is easily 
exchanged when it gets dirty. The fluid drains back into the reservoir when 
turned off and I haven't noticed any fumes when not in use.
It's nice to have a small air compressor to blow dry your parts (do it 
outside) immediately after cleaning to remove all solvent and adding new 
lubricant if doing so.
http://safety-kleen.com/products-services/parts-cleaning-technologies/solvent-parts-washer/manual/model-14
Jon


On Tuesday, February 24, 2015 at 11:35:22 AM UTC-7, Jim Bronson wrote:

 Does anyone have a solvent tank for drivetrain parts cleaning?  That seems 
 like the ultimate solution for cleaning greasy parts.  It would be nice to 
 have two chains and just leave one in there all the time.

 The drawbacks are, potential fumes in an enclosed area and they're 
 expensive.

 I found this one on Amazon but it's $205...

 http://www.amazon.com/Gallon-Pressure-Cleaner-Solvent-Electric/dp/B0029443HG

 Plus 20 gallons of solvent, may put this in the category of maybe someday

 I also do some work on my cars though and it would be nice to have for 
 that as well.  So maybe the dual use will justify it ;)

 -- 
 Keep the metal side up and the rubber side down!
  

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[RBW] Re: Solvent tank for drivetrain cleaning

2015-02-24 Thread cyclotour...@gmail.com
We just got one at the community shop in town bikebbq.com
It's huge, takes a while to heat up, but works fantastically. Can put an 
entire frame inside it!
Doesn't work that great for casual use.

On Tuesday, February 24, 2015 at 10:35:22 AM UTC-8, Jim Bronson wrote:

 Does anyone have a solvent tank for drivetrain parts cleaning?  That seems 
 like the ultimate solution for cleaning greasy parts.  It would be nice to 
 have two chains and just leave one in there all the time.

 The drawbacks are, potential fumes in an enclosed area and they're 
 expensive.

 I found this one on Amazon but it's $205...

 http://www.amazon.com/Gallon-Pressure-Cleaner-Solvent-Electric/dp/B0029443HG

 Plus 20 gallons of solvent, may put this in the category of maybe someday

 I also do some work on my cars though and it would be nice to have for 
 that as well.  So maybe the dual use will justify it ;)

 -- 
 Keep the metal side up and the rubber side down!
  

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Re: [RBW] Re: Solvent tank for drivetrain cleaning

2015-02-24 Thread George Schick
Another good product from Harbor Freight might be an ultrasonic cleaner. 
 I've always wanted one of those and this one is about the right size with 
a 2.5 liter capacity.  Should work good with something like Finish Line 
citrus solvent, which may be diluted with up to 5 parts water.  Would be 
great for chains.

http://www.harborfreight.com/25-liter-ultrasonic-cleaner-95563.html


On Tuesday, February 24, 2015 at 2:15:25 PM UTC-6, Skenry wrote:

 Try this, from Harbor Freight 
 http://www.harborfreight.com/6-1-2-half-gallon-parts-washer-96952.html 
 6.5 gallons and big enough for a crankset with rings attached.   The 
 best washers are heated, but this one is great for normal home use. 
 Scott 

 On Tue, Feb 24, 2015 at 3:09 PM, cyclot...@gmail.com javascript: 
 cyclot...@gmail.com javascript: wrote: 
  We just got one at the community shop in town bikebbq.com 
  It's huge, takes a while to heat up, but works fantastically. Can put an 
  entire frame inside it! 
  Doesn't work that great for casual use. 
  
  
  On Tuesday, February 24, 2015 at 10:35:22 AM UTC-8, Jim Bronson wrote: 
  
  Does anyone have a solvent tank for drivetrain parts cleaning?  That 
 seems 
  like the ultimate solution for cleaning greasy parts.  It would be nice 
 to 
  have two chains and just leave one in there all the time. 
  
  The drawbacks are, potential fumes in an enclosed area and they're 
  expensive. 
  
  I found this one on Amazon but it's $205... 
  
  
 http://www.amazon.com/Gallon-Pressure-Cleaner-Solvent-Electric/dp/B0029443HG 
  
  Plus 20 gallons of solvent, may put this in the category of maybe 
  someday 
  
  I also do some work on my cars though and it would be nice to have for 
  that as well.  So maybe the dual use will justify it ;) 
  
  -- 
  Keep the metal side up and the rubber side down! 
  
  -- 
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 Groups 
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  To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send 
 an 
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 javascript:. 
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Re: [RBW] Re: Solvent tank for drivetrain cleaning

2015-02-24 Thread Scott Henry
Try this, from Harbor Freight
http://www.harborfreight.com/6-1-2-half-gallon-parts-washer-96952.html
6.5 gallons and big enough for a crankset with rings attached.   The
best washers are heated, but this one is great for normal home use.
Scott

On Tue, Feb 24, 2015 at 3:09 PM, cyclotour...@gmail.com
cyclotour...@gmail.com wrote:
 We just got one at the community shop in town bikebbq.com
 It's huge, takes a while to heat up, but works fantastically. Can put an
 entire frame inside it!
 Doesn't work that great for casual use.


 On Tuesday, February 24, 2015 at 10:35:22 AM UTC-8, Jim Bronson wrote:

 Does anyone have a solvent tank for drivetrain parts cleaning?  That seems
 like the ultimate solution for cleaning greasy parts.  It would be nice to
 have two chains and just leave one in there all the time.

 The drawbacks are, potential fumes in an enclosed area and they're
 expensive.

 I found this one on Amazon but it's $205...

 http://www.amazon.com/Gallon-Pressure-Cleaner-Solvent-Electric/dp/B0029443HG

 Plus 20 gallons of solvent, may put this in the category of maybe
 someday

 I also do some work on my cars though and it would be nice to have for
 that as well.  So maybe the dual use will justify it ;)

 --
 Keep the metal side up and the rubber side down!

 --
 You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups
 RBW Owners Bunch group.
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