Which de-greaser do you use before starting a project under the hood/chassis?

Which De-greaser do you reach for to prep your engine / chassis for a job?

  • Krud Cutter

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • WD-40

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • CRC Degreaser Gel

    Votes: 0 0.0%

  • Total voters
    25

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Oven cleaner will take the paint off. Would not recommend unless cleaning parts off the truck.

Simple green, engine foaming cleaner, tire cleaner works well to give a shine if you're into that.

I don't wash the 80 engine I just fix the oil leaks
 
Cajun Brown Industrial Cleaner works wonders
 
Dollar store oven cleaner. Just don't let it sit too long before rinsing to keep aluminum from getting pitted up. Spray, wait 3 minutes, rinse, repeat. YMMV.
Added images, before and after... Results were better than I could have hoped for.

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It must work GREAT! Took the black paint off, and when rinsed, the paint came out red! Lol
 
Back in the day I used to buy red spray bottles of Grease Relief. Great stuff but it has been off market for years. Now I buy the qt spray bottle of Simple Green and the gallon refill at WalMart for about $15 ish total.
 
Schaffers citrol

Ive always wanted to try oven cleaner though

I used to use tons of Schaffer stuff back in the good ol days when I ran the Pressroom for USATODAY. Really like their Molly grease!!
 
I avoid using most of those cleaners as IME they're too harsh on paint and (old) rubber; some cleaners like Purple Power or Simple Green may cause rubber parts to swell, warp, and/or disintegrate before your eyes.

Regular car wash soap or dish soap and water is as strong as I go (unless it's a metal part and off the vehicle). FWIW.
 
I avoid using most of those cleaners as IME they're too harsh on paint and (old) rubber; some cleaners like Purple Power or Simple Green may cause rubber parts to swell, warp, and/or disintegrate before your eyes.

Regular car wash soap or dish soap and water is as strong as I go (unless it's a metal part and off the vehicle). FWIW.

Yep, and there is no or less/little need. A cheap pressure washer, properly used will get most of it. Then, depending on your definition of "clean" soak and respray the tough spots, greatly reducing the need for chems.
 
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I don't wash the 80 engine I just fix the oil leaks

By the time we see them, they are often pretty slimy, making the job a sloppy mess. So pressure washer to the rescue.
 
I’ve had decent luck with some stuff called “AWESOME” my wife found at some dollar store.
I really want to find somewhere to steam my engine though.
 
If it's a serious oil/grease cleanup, then Odorless Mineral Spirits in a lab type squirt bottle.
Add an old toothbrush to cut through it, if it's really caked on grunge.
Bend the head somewhat backward with a heat gun, for better reaching.
Bottle brush if it's in crevices.
Add a compressed air gun, if you really want it spotless NOW, or in deep recesses. (Shield you eyes, trust me :cry: )
Catch pan below of it's a bigger job.

The lab squirt bottle is really effective, and you can reach inaccessible places with a focused stream, without using much.
It washes the grunge downward and away, so you often don't need to touch it.
This is usually a very low mess, neat sort of cleanup.

A few square inch piece of low cost microfiber towel, pre-wetted with a squirt of mineral spirits will soak up an amazing amount of grunge before it's too nasty. I cut the towels into 6 pieces for grease/oil clean up. 2 or 3 of those pieces usually finishes up nice and clean, vs sheet after sheet of paper towel or blue Scott towels.

If it's just general engine bay cleanup, dust & mild road grime, then I use Super Clean (something like Simple Green), large soft brush, and hose down.

Odorless Mineral Spirits & fire danger - I tried my best to light up a puddle of this stuff. Couldn't do it.
Doesn't seem to cause any harm on the skin with short exposure, except maybe drying the skin.
However, if you wear rubber gloves, and gets under/inside while you continue to work for a while - uncomfortable prickly feeling that lasts a couple of hours after cleanup. I really try to avoid that now.

I have never seen Odorless Mineral Spirits damage any material.
I HAVE seen a water based cleaner permanently etch all the aluminum surfaces of a Subaru engine - never to look new again. Don't remember what kind it was.

If it's really nasty big job, say - the whole undercarriage, and I have access to one, then pressure washer is great.
But - nasty stuff gets all over the driveway, which then needs another cleanup of it's own.
 
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