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Cleaning a dirty engine
Posted: Mon Jan 23, 2012 10:13 am
by pgoodier
I serviced my Pajero over the weekend, and came up with an excellent cleaning agent for cleaning the engine bay and engine out.
I mixed Clean Green with water and oven cleaner, and poured the mix into a spray bottle.
Once I had removed all covers etc., I sprayed the engine and engine bay out, wiped it all down, and then sprayed with the hose (thoroughly)
The results were incredible...
Re: Cleaning a dirty engine
Posted: Mon Jan 23, 2012 10:55 am
by GertM
I mixed Clean Green with water and over cleaner,
Did you mean OVEN cleaner?
Re: Cleaning a dirty engine
Posted: Mon Jan 23, 2012 10:58 am
by 4ePikanini
Be careful. Oven cleaner is bad for rust and rubbers/plastics.
Re: Cleaning a dirty engine
Posted: Mon Jan 23, 2012 11:18 am
by 4ePajero
I would not use oven cleaner either.
Any small residue will corrode the component badly, especially aluminium.
I prefer a bio-degradable soap such as Prepsol. You can wash it off on the lawn and it will not damage the grass.
No (petro-based) solvents for me.
Remember also that soap needs time and water to work.
I wash the engine with either clean water or a mild dishwasher solution, to wet everything, and loosen the worst grime. I use the Karcher hi-pressure washer on low pressure setting for this. Lots of foam all over.
Leave for a while, and rinse down with water (while engine is running).
Spray with Prepsol and leave for a while. Rinse (again while engine is running).
Take for a drive to get engine to operating temp and evaporate all water.
Spray lightly with diesel.
Repeat often. If you prevent grime from building up, cleaning becomes easy.
Re: Cleaning a dirty engine
Posted: Mon Jan 23, 2012 12:03 pm
by 4ePikanini
I agree with 4ePajero
I wait until the engine has cooled a bit but still warm, spray prepsol all over.
I then use a bit of prepsol and foam it up with water in a bucket. I then use a foam spunge and get foam in as much places as I can.
Leave for 5 minutes and hose off with pressure washer on low setting (and never closer than 40cm)
I don't spray anything afterwards to make it look shiny as I live on a farm with 4km of gravel to the nearest tar road so it just attracts dust.
Re: Cleaning a dirty engine
Posted: Mon Jan 23, 2012 12:08 pm
by pgoodier
Oh crap.
Thanks for the heads up. I did really thoroughly spray it out, but I am going home tonight and doing it again..........
Re: Cleaning a dirty engine
Posted: Mon Jan 23, 2012 12:10 pm
by macjohnw
4ePajero wrote:Spray lightly with diesel.
Is the diesel only to make it look shiny, or for another purpose? Wont it collect dust more easily?
Re: Cleaning a dirty engine
Posted: Mon Jan 23, 2012 12:20 pm
by 4ePajero
macjohnw wrote:4ePajero wrote:Spray lightly with diesel.
Is the diesel only to make it look shiny, or for another purpose? Wont it collect dust more easily?
Make it look shiny? - Yes
Collect dust? - Yes
Other purposes? - Yes, it stops corrosion (we live at the coast!)
Other purposes? - Yes, it makes the next cleaning effort so much easier.
Re: Cleaning a dirty engine
Posted: Mon Jan 23, 2012 12:26 pm
by macjohnw
Ahhh, the coastal factor!
Re: Cleaning a dirty engine
Posted: Mon Jan 23, 2012 12:37 pm
by pgoodier
....Apparently living at the coast can be a bit like cleaning your engine with oven cleaner!!!
....i've heard