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Date:         Thu, 16 Apr 1998 15:17:54 -0300
Reply-To:     Tim Smith <smitht@UNB.CA>
Sender:       Vanagon Mailing List <Vanagon@vanagon.com>
From:         Tim Smith <smitht@UNB.CA>
Subject:      parts washer...
Comments: To: vanagon@vanagon.com
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"

Hi,

I'll second the parts washer quest, they are great toys. Cheapest is a Spray-and-Wash bottle, set to 'stream' for blasting at the grease, followed by 'spray' to rinse off after some scrubbing. What to do with the drippings? Well a baby's plastic bathtub is about the same length/width as say a vanagon trans, or almost an engine, and an upside down plastic milk crate will keep the parts up out of the murk. Boy, am I cheap. ;).

Next step up is the same thing for $60Cdn, with a hand spray unit attached to a tiny tank/sink with suction tube to the bottom, at the local FLAPS for half price this week, still junk.

What did I do when I wanted a real washer.....? Had an old low pressure 12v fuel pump, from a carbed bus, plenty of vinyl tubing. Got a plastic sink, decent sized, and an empty 5gal steel kerosene drum. Put 2 gals of Varsol in it, ran a drain from sink to drum, tubing to the pump, with another length up to the sink. Bought a $1.49 parts scrubbing brush and was done, just power it with a battery charger. Since I had the fuel pump, the whole thing cost about $15. The large drum acts as a settling tank, probably was ruining the pump with grit, but it was spare anyhow. Anyone know if Varsol is flammable BTW? ;)

Best homemade parts washer (not mine) was made from an old round corner Coca-Cola cooler, one where you slid your bottle along to the end of the racks to pull it out. Just lifted the steel lid, pump started running and the bottle rack with some mesh on top was where you set the parts. It was nice and big, had a parts brush with hose built in.

See what you can do on a budget. bye, Tim


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