Best method to clean and degrease an engine on an engine stand?
#1
Best method to clean and degrease an engine on an engine stand?
I need to clean and degrease a 455 on an engine stand. Are there any tips or tricks to make it easier (other than just dousing the thing in engine degreaser)?
#2
I put mineral spirts in a bug/weed sprayer and spray a little at a time keep the mess to a minumim. Lots and lots of spraping tooth brush cleaning to aggitate the mess.
About 3 solid hours cleaning in the block and heads before this pic
About 3 solid hours cleaning in the block and heads before this pic
#3
engine degreaser, and then a pressure washer. Repeat as necessary. A lot more mess than Gearheads78's method, however. Done in under an hour. Not advisable in temperatures below 33 degrees Fahrenheit.
#4
Get the cheapest oven cleaner you can find. Spray it down and let sit for an hour or so, then go to it with scrub brushes. Add cleaner as needed and you'll be able to tell when it is all broken loose, then hose it down.
Be sure to put a piece of cardboard under the stand as you spray and scrub and wear rubber gloves.
Be sure to put a piece of cardboard under the stand as you spray and scrub and wear rubber gloves.
#6
I personally use a product called GREASED LIGHTENING. I know home depot sells it for about $7 a gallon. Way cheaper than engine degreaser. Put it in a spray bottle, spray it on and let it soak a little spray more, scrub rinse. Have fun! Have a beer!
#7
I use a cheap degreaser lay down a large cheap plastic painter's tarp under the engine the clean. After the cleaning is complete I gather up the platic tarp and put it in a plastic garbage bag and of to the dump it goes
#8
I just used engine bright when I cleaned my motor, I think I went through about 2 1/2 to 3 cans of that stuff. I just let it soak for about 10 minutes and then I scraped all of the goop off. I thought it worked great and then I just sprayed the motor with a pressure washer when I was done.
#9
If you are going to have the engine rebuilt it really isn't necessary to degrease it extensively. I took a short block to my machinist and the only parts I "degreased" were the valve covers, heads, oil pan, intake, and brackets. These were all removed from the engine though. Once the machinist gets it he will hot tank it and that will destroy the grease instantly.
#11
I also like to use cheap degreaser, and brake cleaner(cheap as well). First i scrape the heavy crud off then let the degreaser work and hit it with a small brush and a tooth brush, then use the brake cleaner to blast out the tight spots rinse it off and your good to go. Oh and I use a plastic storage box that I stole off the wife to catch the drips.
#12
I assume you are prepping it for paint? All of the degreasers listed above, brake cleaner, oven cleaner, paint solvents, lacquer thinner, paint prep solvent cleaner, etc. will do the job. Multiple cleaners is the way to go because different ones work better on different contaminants. Just start with your strongest solvent based cleaner first & finish the job with a water based cleaner & preferably a pressure washer. If you use several cleaners in succession, it can be done fairly quickly & without all the toothbrush scrubbing. If you have just assembled the engine, you shouldn't have major gunk, only a bit of oil, assembly lube & hand prints. One thing is certain, it will never be too clean for painting.
Thread
Thread Starter
Forum
Replies
Last Post
jaunty75
General Discussion
35
January 1st, 2019 06:51 PM
Aceshigh
Brakes/Hydraulic Systems
10
April 21st, 2010 08:33 AM