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Thread: Has anyone used Rust Dissolver???
          
   
   

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  1. #11
    Bob Parmenter's Avatar
    Bob Parmenter is offline CHR Member Visit my Photo Gallery
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    Okay, bringing up the pool thing has caused me to find my "be cautious" hat. Not going to do too much of the Bill Nye the Science guy thing here but folks should be aware of dangers involved since we're just throwing this out to the world at random.

    Acids are nothing to play around with, they can hurt you. And nowhere in this discussion have we talked much about concentrations. One indicator of the activity, and intensity of an acid is pH. Water, being neutral, has a pH of 7, alkalines, e.g. soaps, are numbers higher than 7 up to 14, the bigger the number the more harm they will do to you. Acids go the other way, the smaller the number, the more intense they are. Milk for example is around 6.5 pH. very mild acidic. Vinegar was mentioned, which falls somewhere in the 2.5-3 range depending on concentration. Phosphoric acid is around 2-2.5. The pool thing has me worried because my past experience with that is that acid for pools had been muratic (or muriatic) acid, which is a diluted form of hydrochloric acid. These often fall in the 0-.5 range. For instance a 10% solution of muriatic acid (meaning 90% something else, probably water) will eat a hole in your shorts in a hot hurry. A 30% solution, say, of phosphoric acid might cause some irritation, but likely won't eat through your skivies.

    Rod & Custom did an article a while back about muratic acid being a cheap and readily available product to use in rust removal/control, but it was loaded with cautionary statements, and recommended a high level of dilution. Of course eye and skin protection, with any of these products, is an absolute must!!!

    One of the arguments for buying preprepared commercial products is a safety margin is already built in.
    Last edited by Bob Parmenter; 04-28-2007 at 11:02 AM.
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