Mikedjwelding wrote:It just happened, we washed it when we were done with it and the next day it was rusted. We need to get it shipped soon and can't afford to waste time trying all kinds of different things and hoping it works, I was hoping someone here had experience in actually getting it out permanently.
Mikey whined
"I was hoping someone here had experience in actually getting it out permanently."
HHiiiiiiyyyyYYYYOOO!!!
1-never use any sanding, grinding or wire wheels, brushes that have ever touched steel.
2-Wire wheeling will embed the steel particles into the SS--and can cause intergranular corrosion, etc.,
besides pissing off everybody. Handling/fabbing SS requires cleaning all, clean work surfaces,
repeated wiping and cleaning.
3-Do not try to sand, wire brush, etc.--those tiny particles away--just makes matters worse
B4 using diluted nitric-
phosphoric acid -H'depot paint dept. $16/gallon
This process, even with the nitric--is to try and remove the steel--not embed it further
gently flood the area, wait a few minutes, try to gently wipe off any rust bloom or smearing
-wipe clean, wash and flood again with phosphoric, let stand, while gently using wet 3M pad to
gently remove more stain---rinse with phosphoric, p-towel wipe, flood again
[I much prefer using the phosphoric to the nitric--for a whole bunch of reasons and if you've never
worked with nitric, then don't ask.]
If some stain has just been removed, the wipe, rinse with phosphoric, right now---you don't want
this steel solution to linger on the SS
for heavier embeded stuff--can use NEW SS toothbrush and very gently brush area, keep towel wiping
and flooding with new acid as soon as some stuff has visually been lifted off.
Repeat, repeat, repeat.
After one's pretty certain that the f'up is corrected then soak or at least wet down and let stand
for 30 min's or longer--something like 10% nitric solution to passivate the cleaned surface...
..or give more time with the phosphoric.
Rinsing with steam distilled water doesn't hurt.
Passivation is not a cure-all for gross contamination, like a whack job using a steel wire wheel---
where's the supervision and training?
--I've used the phosphoric cleaning described above--even with heavily rust stained SS.
I've only had 1 episode in my shop of steel contamination on new SS--and by gawd--I learned
much from that epi$ode--cause by myself, not outside parties. You will, too.