Who has a parts washer?

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www.octagonmma.com
I see Northern Tool has a 20 gallon model on a stand that would fit nicely in the garage, it's not expensive, and I started thinking about degreasing all sorts of things, rapidly and thoroughly. Knuckle clean up, brake parts, engine bits. Intoxicating!

Does anyone have experience using these small washers at home? Are they effective?
 
I have a bigger one, and absolutely love it..
 
Indulge me here. What size and how does it work? I mean, yes theres a brush and a motor, etc. but does IT wash the parts like a machine or do you wash the parts yourself? I am so buying one of these tomorrow......
 
It has a pump to pump the fluid. Use a brush to clean. If you want a parts washer where you just put parts in and walk away, be prepared to pay some $$$ for it.
 
I use a 2 gal bucket with simple green, strap an old vibrating sander to the side and let it go. Works great. If really cruddy, through in a couple of tubes of BB's. The vibrating BB's knock off lots of crud. Parts clean themselves. But would like to pick up a cleaning tub.
 
I've got a harbor freight basin on stand at the farm, and a 50 gallon stainless vat style at work.

The 50 gallon is heated (120*) but otherwise still just a recirc pump. It works great, but purchase price is around $1200 without the industrial solvent.

The HF isn't heated, but I run diesel in it and it cleans great. I've had diesel in it for 2 years and the pump still works fine. If you let your parts soak under the running solvent for 20-30 minutes then the brush will knock off the grime with no effort. It sits outside under a tarp, and still looks almost new.

If you get one, get one with the flexible nozzle as well as brush. Much easier to set it up and walk away than the brush only models.

For serious cleaning/rust removal, skip straight to muriatic acid. Not safe for aluminum though.
 
Here is what I have. I upgraded to the Stainless Steel Cabinet.


Here is there website.

http://www.adfsys.com/Product_Index/glovebox.html
DSCF1130.webp
DSCF1131.webp
 
Looks like a nice shop you have there sir. Got a better pic? Where did you pick up the enclosed parts washer? How much?
 
i've got a twenty gallon cheapo model...only thing i wish was that it filtered the solvent better. it's a bitch to clean up the tank and replace with clean solvent. one front end and your solvent is crap and you have a layer of gunk in the bottom to dig through
 
I was tinking of buying a cheap 20gal myself too but haven't gotten around to it yet.
 
At first I thought you posted a pic of your blasting cabinet. I like that!

Where did you pick up the enclosed parts washer? How much?

That looks like a blast cabinet to me ;)

I was transferred from Iowa to California in 1995. I was the service manager for a mom and pop company (STIHL) and covered 8 state and one common wealth (Guam).

I needed a parts washer that would comply to Ca laws. The standard Stoddard solvent or the mineral spirit tanks are fine for at home do it yourselfers but in business you cannot use them since they are not cost effective. Safety Clean charges $175.00 per month the maintain that type of parts washer. They don't care if it is a 20gallon or a 50 gallon.

I researched and found a few companies made what I needed. I settled on an ADF since they are build in Iowa. They use water and non foaming soap. What every you use in your dishwasher is just fine. They have an oil skimmer on the back to keep the water clean. They have a built in heater as well. I had the cabinet built in stainless steel since most of them I have seen were rusted out.

When I left the service area to fine tune a new department the next two service managers never used it. They though it was a sand blast cabinet.

I was able to buy it from the company through a scrap request 7 years after I initially bought it. Original price in 1995 $6,800. Scrap request price in 2002 $10.00.

For once I was in the right place at the right time.
 
But do the cheapo ones from china actually hold up for a few years of cruiser rebuild abuse?
 
I got a Clarke 40 gallon parts washer as a gift from the father in law. he picked it up from Tractor Supply Company, but it looks damn close to what Harbor Freight was recently selling. Upon assembly the pump didn't work. I called Clarke and they shipped me a new pump assembly in about 6 days. It works great. I try to take most dirt and grease off before dunking in the washer. The fluid was $50 from the autoparts store. I am cheap adn didn't wan tto purchase a second container of washing fluid, so I put a couple of bricks in the bottom in order to get the volume higher and the pump working.

It is a heck of a lot easier to use one of these for small and large parts, than any cob job I have fabbed in the masonary tub. The solvent is great...especially the stuff that limits flash rusting.
 

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