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An Eco-Friendly Way to Clean Rust Off Metal

7-1-rust.jpgWe just read that you can clean rust from metal by using white vinegar and a wire brush. Has anyone tried this? It might affect the way we look at rusty items at the flea market...

 
 

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green ideas, cleaning, painting, fixing & repair, rust

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Comments (12)

Salvaging any elderly object is already quite eco-friendly.

Although I haven't used vinegar in this way, I've tried and failed with the home remedy of aluminum foil and Coca-Cola. An automotive wadding polish like Nevrdull does the best job:
http://www.nevrdull.com

Here's the fixture that I revived with it:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/98704941@N00/2342397976/in/set-72157601955717111

posted by wig3000 on July 1st 2008 at 3:46pm
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I used vinegar & aluminium foil. My hands turned black for a few days but it works.

posted by jenny! on July 1st 2008 at 4:32pm
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I love Nevrdull, and it seems to clean EVERYTHING... Including the grime on wood that accumulates over years of use with dirty fingers.

Although I've never used the vinegar and steel brush approach, I don't see why it shouldn't. Even without the vinegar, you're basically taking an abrasive tool to the metal and grinding off the rusted bit.

posted by bobthefish on July 1st 2008 at 5:16pm
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Wow, Wig3000! That fixture is all sorts of shiny and sparkling like new. Excellent work!

posted by Seaside on July 1st 2008 at 6:51pm
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I grew up in Hawaii, where things rust if you look at 'em cross-eyed. Scrubbing rust off my bike was a regularly scheduled childhood duty, and I always used plain tap water & aluminum foil.

posted by effinn on July 1st 2008 at 8:06pm
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Thanks, Seaside! We're still happy with our lamp rehab.

The issue we've had with the aluminum foil method is that the foil scrubbing looks like it's also very finely scratching/dulling the surrounding chrome finish.

posted by wig3000 on July 1st 2008 at 8:24pm
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Yes, vinegar is great and then to prevent further rusting try WD 40, especially on garden tools wheels, everything. I love the stuff, you can even wait till it dries and paint over it. I restored an old wind mill with it and it looks great.

posted by click212 on July 2nd 2008 at 5:39am
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Beautiful photo - I love that pink chair.

posted by HeatherAB on July 2nd 2008 at 6:11am
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I used white vinegar and aluminum foil to clean the chrome legs on an old diner-style table recently. It worked really well. I'm prissy so I didn't get much black on my hands and it washed right off.

My mother used plain steel wool to keep her bicycle rust-free growing up. She says it works like a charm, though I haven't tried it.

posted by BetterBombshell on July 2nd 2008 at 8:20am
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I'll be frank - I'm a big fan of rusty metal objects from yore.

posted by reversibleraincoat on July 2nd 2008 at 9:33am
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i've used navel jelly (find at a hardware/auto supply store and is a bright bubble gum pink color) but i'm not sure what the environmental impacts are.

a quick search came up with this stuff but it might be a bit more than you need.

http://www.evaporust.com/evaporust.html

posted by payzlee on July 2nd 2008 at 1:57pm
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Plain foil works really well on rusty chrome (try it on an old bicycle - it's amazing). I've never tried vinegar, though.

posted by Caitlin in Seattle on July 2nd 2008 at 5:56pm
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