14 September 2007, 20:41
John E DaviesArticle on ultrasonic case cleaning
I ran across this article and thought it might be of interest:
UltraSonic Case Cleaning I recently bought a cheap Chinese US cleaner with 12x6x6 tank and am going to try his method on my .480 brass.
John Davies
Spokane WA
14 September 2007, 22:41
PeterJohn, thanks for the link and the tip. Please keep me posted on your results, and also the make and place where you bought your ultrasonic cleaner.
peter
15 September 2007, 20:04
John E Daviesquote:
Originally posted by Peter:
John, thanks for the link and the tip. Please keep me posted on your results, and also the make and place where you bought your ultrasonic cleaner.
peter
I used my 6 liter machine on some jewelry and faucet aerators and was very pleased. It's a Eumax which is a Chinese brand sold in Canada. I "won" it for $199 plus shipping on eBay - here's a link to some current auctions:
http://search.ebay.com/search/search.dll?sofocus=bs&sbr...prchi=&fsop=1&fsoo=1It isn't particularly well made compared to the "lab grade" Branson units, but for occasional use (not 12 hours per day continuous) I expect it will be fine.
When I do some brass I will post a followup report.
John
17 September 2007, 04:28
PeterThanks John. 6.5 liters is a serious size! Is there a point where you can put too much "stuff" in and it degrades performance?
Peter.
17 September 2007, 19:23
John E Daviesquote:
Originally posted by Peter:
Thanks John. 6.5 liters is a serious size! Is there a point where you can put too much "stuff" in and it degrades performance?
Peter.
Peter - a cheap unit has less power, so they don't clean as vigorously as a $400 unit. So you just let it run a few minutes longer.
I like to fill the tank with water, and float a plastic margarine container with solvent and small parts. Or you can use a glass beaker or similar to isolate the cleaning solvent from the working medium, so you don't dirty up a gallon of solvent. Or you can zip a part into quart freezer bag and float it. The important things to remember are never let it run dry and never let a heavy object rest on the bottom of the tank - both will trash the electronics.
Overloading the unit slows things down - don't cram it full of hardware!
John Davies
Spokane WA