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Gearbox clean

Kongsodoken

Active member
After spending an age cleaning, re-plating and replacing everything under the rear of my car, finally started putting it back together again........I do not want to re-build the gear box having paid for the diff to be re-built 6 months ago...
so my question will it cause any damage if I have the casing Soda/Vapour blasted as I can not bear to put it back dirty[:D]

I asked the wife but she will not allow me to do this


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Not sure about soda blasting but I would thing you would be ok so long as vents and seal surfaces were well protected. I agree with your wife - those fiberglass/resin tubs will stain....If you have porcelain in good shape it should wash right off [:D]
 
I just used Gunk engine degreaser on mine. I had a leak I needed to identify and the gunk brought it up a treat, turns out my drain plug was worn which causing the leak.
 
There is a risk in blasting any mechanical component, my friend has a blasting business and has guys bringing in motorbike engines and gearboxes regularly. The owners try methods of keeping the media out but nothing works, it gets in, the seals fitted are to stop internal fluids coming out not external fluids under pressure getting in, my mate makes them sign a disclaimer and often talks them out of doing it.

Soda blasting is the least abrasive and in theory it leaves no residual media as it vaporises on contact, you will still have to degrease it first or the media will simply bounce off grease or be absorbed.

In the past for cleaning alloy components I have used a product called ALTRANS, its made by DEB, its an acid solution and smaller items can be soaked in it or larger items can be cleaned in a similar manner to using Gunk. It tends to clean to a dull natural finish, if you wants a white/silver finish only blasting will achieve this.

Alternatively get it steam cleaned at high temperature and paint it with an aluminium paint, sometimes a painted finish is better because a raw casting that's been blasted absorbs dirt and grease and is hard to clean.

Ultimately the best finish is to strip the part down, blast it to a raw finish and then seal it with a clear satin lacquer, that is how I have done my own concours projects in the past.

Cheers, Paul
 
Thanks for the replies ...still a bit unsure which way to go[&:] tried scrubbing with gunk and a pressure washer but it still looks grey and old (like me[:D]) but clean i was hoping for that nice shiney bright look, I may try the painted route
 
I have used a product called ali clean on the intake manifold that bought it up very clean, it was difficult to keep that way though! http://www.frost.co.uk/automotive-cleaning/chemicals/frost-ali-clean-alloy-wheel-cleaner.html
 

ORIGINAL: 944Turbo

I have used a product called ali clean on the intake manifold that bought it up very clean, it was difficult to keep that way though! http://www.frost.co.uk/automotive-cleaning/chemicals/frost-ali-clean-alloy-wheel-cleaner.html

Thanks Just purchased some ...worth a try but may still paint just to be sure[:D]
 
Tried the Ali cleaner it is OK but seems to oxidize the surface .....so in the end I used a wire brush on a drill

I'ts not perfect and not as good as I would like but I'm not going to risk blasting and it looks alot better than when it came out[:D]

getting the dents out of the fins on the oil cooler took ages[:D]

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