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What’s the easiest method for cleaning the light rust off of tools? I had a few days of warm outside air mixing with a cold floor causing a lot of condensation in my garage which I just realized today caused some light rusting on a few tools.
 

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What’s the easiest method for cleaning the light rust off of tools? I had a few days of warm outside air mixing with a cold floor causing a lot of condensation in my garage which I just realized today caused some light rusting on a few tools.
Evaporust converts red to black. Then wd40/oil/fluid film to stop the problem from reocurring.
 
What’s the easiest method for cleaning the light rust off of tools? I had a few days of warm outside air mixing with a cold floor causing a lot of condensation in my garage which I just realized today caused some light rusting on a few tools.

Just had this problem myself. I use my a home-made solution of citric acid, baking soda, and dish soap to make a rust converter. If you can remember to pull them out of the solution after a couple hours and not leave them overnight, light rust should just disappear instead or turning to black oxide (which you can either scrub off or leave as a protective coating).
 
Rub them with motor oil or rust proof spray.

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Evaporust converts red to black. Then wd40/oil/fluid film to stop the problem from reocurring.

Just had this problem myself. I use my a home-made solution of citric acid, baking soda, and dish soap to make a rust converter. If you can remember to pull them out of the solution after a couple hours and not leave them overnight, light rust should just disappear instead or turning to black oxide (which you can either scrub off or leave as a protective coating).

I remembered I have some Rust Check rust converter. Is that a better option than a vinegar soak?
I also have some Krown and Keepit rust sprays that I’ll use to coat the tools afterwards.
 
Personally I hate it when my tools are covered in oil. I usually clean with brake cleaner and put them away dry. If I had a serious issue with them corroding, I might spray them with teflon dry lube - same stuff I use on my chain.
 
Evaoporust safe for motorcycle chains?

I've been using kerosene and a steel bristle brush. And a lot of F-n elbow grease.

Anything easier?
I have no idea. I don't use gloves when using it so it may not smoke seals. You could try with a chain near thee end of its life and see what happens.
 
What’s the easiest method for cleaning the light rust off of tools? I had a few days of warm outside air mixing with a cold floor causing a lot of condensation in my garage which I just realized today caused some light rusting on a few tools.
Drop em in Pinesol overnight.
 
Pulled the carb on my 35 year old Craftsman blower, blew carb cleaner through it and and ran it through a few cycles in my ultrasonic cleaner.

Looked great post clean, but gaskets and needle o rings looked worn and decided on a new carb for $27 vs. a rebuild kit. Installed and runs great.

Stabil added, oil change, lubed everything and sprayed and wiped down all metal parts to clean and inhibit rust.

Over the years I've learned you do all this PM stuff at your leisure when the weather is decent vs. fixing issues in December in the middle of a snow storm.

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Install of new battery and oil change on HD
Glad it's done was friggin freezing and windy out, it was blowing my oil every where.
Had to work outside as there was a scheduled power outage this morning.
 
I got a Johnny Pag FX-3 running again and bolted on a bunch of random parts that were either supplied by the owner, or random parts I had around the garage.

It's a mish-mash, the left fork seal is shot, and the speedo doesn't work - but she runs/shifts/stops great now!

The real win was just being able to focus on something for a couple hours and actually see it through start to finish, despite the concussion. Usually I can't do one thing for too long before I either get distracted, hit a road block, or start getting too confused, or just get too exhausted and have to abandon project.

I tackled it right after a nap, and after an hour the missus came to sit in the garage to keep me company for the second hour, which, I think, probably helped me just get it through.

Somehow this thing is both the bike I'm least proud of wrenching on and the bike I'm most proud I I was ABLE to wrench on at the same time.

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