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Evapo-Rust

Dronic69

Well-Known Member
Premium Member
Evening All,

Just curious in those that may have used the "Evapo-Rust" product?

It states that it will remove rust and won't affect any paint work underneath?

I have an item (Mild Steel) that has surface rust both on the bare steel which also extends over a part painted section.

The before and after photos looks promising as highlighted in this BOCN thread:


Anyone else obtained similar results?
Is soaking the item the way to go?

All feedback and thoughts welcome.
Thanks
Cheers
Drew
 
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I use it. If you leave it too long - over night, etc - it could give you some issues, but use it per the instructions and it is a miracle worker. You can re-use it a number of times depending on how much rust you actually remove, but it takes longer (thus the overnight issue). I buy it by the gallon.
 
Firstly, thank you for the great feedback!
Yeah I would be closely monitoring the progress.

Interesting ......according to the website, it states that it doesn't affect non-oxide paints:


From my limited painting knowledge, oxide paints are normally used for anti-rusting purposes - i.e. protect bare steel etc.
How would one know if a non-oxide /oxide paint was used? (apart from testing a small area)

The item I have in question is a torpedo striker mechanism with attached whiskers - of which the tips have been painted black (looks to be the original paint job)
Were most projectiles painted with non-oxide paints?
Thanks
Cheers
 
It's a good product, but one word of caution. Immerse the whole object otherwise you may well get a 'tide' line which will not disappear with subsequent treatment. It depends how long you leave it but I learnt this to my cost.
 
Concur with all previous comments. Good stuff.
I've left items to soak for a week with no ill effects. Only paint with rust incursions is affected. Otherwise, paint is untouched.
My 5 gallons has been in a bucket in excess of 5 years. Have regenerated with water.(Keep a lid on it, it evaporates.) The active ingredients are still producing rust removal results.
 
I left a projectile with original paint (presumably enamel) in Evapo Rust for 4 hours and there was no paint left. So don’t use it for too long and monitor frequently
 
A couple of reference pics of the item in question - IMHO it's the original paint (hence I don't want to "rush" into it) as I have seen another one with the exact same black painted areas:

BOCN-1.jpg
BOCN-2.jpg
BOCN-3.jpg

I'll definitely give it a ago and closely monitor the process.

Thank you all for all the great feedback!!!
Cheers
Drew
 
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The other option is perhaps used a rust converter, which attacks the active rust - but is more acidic.

I'm not worried re the bare metal as I can get the Dremel onto those parts...........

Hum - I'll sleep on it :cool:
 
It is a great product. The photo shows a before and after photo of my Linco needle firing pistol. :D
This is how it looks after a couple of hours submerged in Evapo Rust,
and no cleaning or mechanical cleaning has taken place.
This is how it literately looked after I pulled it from the Evapo bath.
Evapo Rust.jpg
 
The other option is perhaps used a rust converter, which attacks the active rust - but is more acidic.

I'm not worried re the bare metal as I can get the Dremel onto those parts...........

Hum - I'll sleep on it :cool:

Workshop Hero Metal Rescue Rust Removal Bath 5L - MR5​


SKU: A1290583

Haven't tried this product, but looks to be similar. The example in their video seems to retain the paint. available from Repco.
I note that Evaporust is now a CRC product, previously was an independent brand, must have been bought out or sold the name?.
 

Workshop Hero Metal Rescue Rust Removal Bath 5L - MR5​


SKU: A1290583

Haven't tried this product, but looks to be similar. The example in their video seems to retain the paint. available from Repco.
I note that Evaporust is now a CRC product, previously was an independent brand, must have been bought out or sold the name?.

Thanks for this - I checked it out and it seems to be almost an identical product - instructions /cautions were virtually the same.

Yes - CRC now distributes the product.
 
Well, there must be a God (which one I'm not sure off :) ) as I found a perfect Evapo-Rust test piece - a small hand axe with similar surface rust and BLACK paint:

EV-1.jpg

EV-2.jpg

Interesting, the instructions recommend rinsing the item in water prior to dropping it into the solution:

To my shock /horror - while I was rag drying it (this was after just rinsing in cold water) the black paint started to come off on one side -

EV-3.jpg

The other side seem less affected or not affected at all
EV-4.jpg

OK as it was just a test piece into the bucket it went - monitoring the progress.

After approx. 1 hour:

EV-5.jpg

EV-6.jpg

I rinsed again and carefully dab dry - after which the paint section seems to have now stabilized.

I tested the striker and as expected the black painted sections didn't show any signs of coming off after the water rinse Phew!
(Yeah - they don't make them like in the old days!!)
Cheers
Drew
 
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Interesting results.......

The striker mechanism was soaked for up to six hours with regular monitoring every 30-60mins.
Most of the bare metal rust was removed, however there were still rust spots present on the painted areas even after 6 hours albeit diminishing some what.
I removed the item, rinsed then let dry - after a short time very light rust was forming all over.
I decided to used a rust converter and that actually removed the remaining spots on the painted areas.
Let dry and dremel the bare metal areas with a small circular wire brush attachment.

Here is the final result:

BOCN-6.jpg
BOCN-7.jpg
20240210_213454.jpg

Just for comparison:

BOCN-10.jpg


Note:
I was conscious of not wiping/ rubbing the painted areas while the item was in solution and even after rinsing, left the item to drip dry. Seems the solution does to a degree softens the paint!
Once dry the painted areas could be handled as normally.

Quite happy with the result!
Cheers
Drew

BTW - It is the original paint!!!! :cool:
 
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Evaporust claim too that if you leave a clean solution on the item it will resist corrosion. Handy if you have a delay before painting. Bare steel will rust in front of your eyes otherwise!
 
Evaporust claim too that if you leave a clean solution on the item it will resist corrosion. Handy if you have a delay before painting. Bare steel will rust in front of your eyes otherwise!
Perhaps I should just do away with the suggested water rinse after soaking and let it drip dry! :)
CRC also recommends using RUST-BLOCK - yes another one of their products
 
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