Fordmods Logo

cleaning intercooler 

 

Page 1 of 1 [ 13 posts ] 

 
 Post subject: cleaning intercooler
Posted: Tue Oct 23, 2007 3:18 pm 
Parts Gopher
Offline

Posts: 50

Joined: 7th Sep 2005

Location: sydney
NSW, Australia

i have a used intercooler and i want to give it a clean what would the best way clean it inside and outside.

i was think just to use carby cleaner on the inside and metal polish on the outside?

would this work?
will the carb cleaner get rid of the oil and dust inside it?
Top
 Profile  
 
 
Posted: Tue Oct 23, 2007 4:40 pm 
Getting Side Ways
Offline
User avatar

Age: 71

Posts: 3555

Joined: 7th Nov 2004

Gallery: 4 images

Power: 482 rwkw

Location: Penrith
NSW, Australia

Inside I'd use laundry detergent..
After using carb cleaner, make sure you wash it out well..
I'd use laundry powder on inside and c/ cleaner on outside where it can be rinsed real good...
You don't want anything to corrode

 

_________________

As in ZOOM 126 edition
331 Dart block,3.25/ 4340 steel crank, Oliver rods,TFS ported track heat heads, TFS track heat inlet Twin SC61 turbo's
Project 1UZ-EF has started.. S475 Turbo 4.0 V8 Mustang Celica.....

Top
 Profile  
 
 
Posted: Tue Oct 23, 2007 4:50 pm 
Getting Side Ways
Offline

Age: 43

Posts: 9452

Joined: 9th Nov 2004

Gallery: 4 images

Ride: Fordrunner 5.0 Turbo

Location: Wollongong
NSW, Australia

What about some degreaser for inside and out?
Top
 Profile  
 
 
Posted: Tue Oct 23, 2007 5:20 pm 
Stock as a Rock
Offline
User avatar

Age: 47

Posts: 140

Joined: 7th Jul 2007

Gallery: 21 images

Location: sidunee
NSW, Australia

id say degreaser on the inside and wash it out real good, block off one end and fill it up then drain and repeat.

you want to make sure there is no metal or rocks or other crap in it or it may destroy somthing expensive.

 

_________________

bf xr6turbo siemens injectors, full plazmaman 800 hp intercooler kit, 5 inch cat and custom dual 2.5 inch zorst, billet flywheel with mal wood clutch kit, braided hoses, big brakes, 3.2L surge tank/w twin 044's rebuilt motor with forged and billet everything 420+ rwkw on 98. holden killer.

Top
 Profile  
 
 
Posted: Tue Oct 23, 2007 11:24 pm 
Getting Side Ways
Offline
User avatar

Age: 55

Posts: 7031

Joined: 18th Apr 2005

Location: Hobart
TAS, Australia

{USERNAME} wrote:
Inside I'd use laundry detergent..
After using carb cleaner, make sure you wash it out well..
I'd use laundry powder on inside and c/ cleaner on outside where it can be rinsed real good...
You don't want anything to corrode
laundry detergent can corrode aluminum even if you rinse it well. apparently it oxidizes the alloy... so I was told!

 

_________________

Mind f**k!!! it works on feeble minded ignorant sheeples... there's plenty of em on this site... some are very intelligent but by god they are so thick!!!

{USERNAME} wrote:
You can buy them seppertly

Top
 Profile  
 
 
Posted: Wed Oct 24, 2007 12:44 am 
Getting Side Ways
Offline
User avatar

Age: 71

Posts: 3555

Joined: 7th Nov 2004

Gallery: 4 images

Power: 482 rwkw

Location: Penrith
NSW, Australia

{USERNAME} wrote:
{USERNAME} wrote:
Inside I'd use laundry detergent..
After using carb cleaner, make sure you wash it out well..
I'd use laundry powder on inside and c/ cleaner on outside where it can be rinsed real good...
You don't want anything to corrode
laundry detergent can corrode aluminum even if you rinse it well. apparently it oxidizes the alloy... so I was told!


So will carb cleaner and degreaser...
One tablespoon disolved in 5 litres of water won't hurt...

 

_________________

As in ZOOM 126 edition
331 Dart block,3.25/ 4340 steel crank, Oliver rods,TFS ported track heat heads, TFS track heat inlet Twin SC61 turbo's
Project 1UZ-EF has started.. S475 Turbo 4.0 V8 Mustang Celica.....

Top
 Profile  
 
 
Posted: Wed Oct 24, 2007 1:03 am 
Getting Side Ways
Offline
User avatar

Age: 55

Posts: 7031

Joined: 18th Apr 2005

Location: Hobart
TAS, Australia

just use car shampoo & lots of hot water.

 

_________________

Mind f**k!!! it works on feeble minded ignorant sheeples... there's plenty of em on this site... some are very intelligent but by god they are so thick!!!

{USERNAME} wrote:
You can buy them seppertly

Top
 Profile  
 
 
Posted: Wed Oct 24, 2007 1:05 am 
Getting Side Ways
Offline
User avatar

Age: 55

Posts: 7031

Joined: 18th Apr 2005

Location: Hobart
TAS, Australia

{USERNAME} wrote:
{USERNAME} wrote:
{USERNAME} wrote:
Inside I'd use laundry detergent..
After using carb cleaner, make sure you wash it out well..
I'd use laundry powder on inside and c/ cleaner on outside where it can be rinsed real good...
You don't want anything to corrode
laundry detergent can corrode aluminum even if you rinse it well. apparently it oxidizes the alloy... so I was told!


So will carb cleaner and degreaser...
One tablespoon disolved in 5 litres of water won't hurt...
your throttle body & rocker cover is made of alloy so carb cleaner & degreaser should work fine.

 

_________________

Mind f**k!!! it works on feeble minded ignorant sheeples... there's plenty of em on this site... some are very intelligent but by god they are so thick!!!

{USERNAME} wrote:
You can buy them seppertly

Top
 Profile  
 
 
Posted: Wed Oct 24, 2007 11:25 am 
Parts Gopher
Offline
User avatar

Age: 39

Posts: 84

Joined: 21st Jan 2005

Location: Geelong
VIC, Australia

Block up one end, and put some petrol in swirl it around and rinse it, you'll be amazed at what can come out sometimes.

 

_________________

In hope we believe... but in God we trust...

Top
 Profile  
 
 
Posted: Wed Oct 24, 2007 12:42 pm 
Parts Gopher
Offline

Posts: 50

Joined: 7th Sep 2005

Location: sydney
NSW, Australia

hmm there are some conflicting answers.

maybe i should just get a radiator place to clean it out.

i had a look around and apperantly land rover sell a cleaner for intercoolers inside and out safe
Top
 Profile  
 
 
Posted: Wed Oct 24, 2007 12:48 pm 
Technical Contributor
Offline
User avatar

Age: 41

Posts: 4355

Joined: 14th Dec 2005

Gallery: 36 images

Ride: Fairlane

Location: Newy
NSW, Australia

Block up one end, use detergent diluted in water, swish it all around, empty it, do it a few times, then wash out thourly with normal water a few times, just to get the excess out. You shouldnt have a problem.

 

_________________

The Lane Lives.... Finally!!!!

Top
 Profile  
 
 
Posted: Wed Oct 24, 2007 3:35 pm 
Getting Side Ways
Offline
User avatar

Age: 39

Posts: 4401

Joined: 25th Mar 2005

Ride: BA XT, BA XR6T, ED Ghia 5.0

Location: Perth
WA, Australia

Quote:
I couldn't look inside the radiator to see if it was as goopy as the water block. With much wider pipes and larger corners, it shouldn't have been, but I couldn't tell. From the outside, it looked as it did when new, except for a healthy fuzz of dust on the grille section.

I was still going to give it a darn good cleaning, though. With small input and output pipes, it'd be a pain to hook it up to a tap and give it a thorough blasting; the pump I was using, even running from more than 12 volts (which is not good for it) didn't have anything like enough power to shove significantly heavier than water crud around all of the corners and out.

So here's how to flush out a somewhat clogged radiator on the cheap, without using amazingly toxic solvents or pumping soapy water through it for days on end.

1) Make sure the radiator tubing's full of water.

2) Point the radiator's pipes at something you don't mind getting all wet. Since the Senfu radiator pipes are copper, it's easy to bend the smaller-diameter header pipes up a bit, for ease of access. And longer range.

3) Jam a butane (lighter gas) can with an appropriate nozzle on it onto one radiator connector. Push down.

4) Observe 20 foot jet of water created when butane flashes to vapour and pushes all of the water out of the radiator very quickly indeed.

Butane's not very good for you, but if you do this in a decently ventilated area without any ignition sources nearby, there's no cause for alarm. And lighter gas is cheap. The ejected water carried plenty of precipitate with it; a few repeats of the flushing procedure probably got the radiator tolerably clean.

You could also do this with an air compressor, of course, but most people don't have one.


I've always wanted to try that. From {DESCRIPTION}

 

_________________

What's the difference between a Holden and a sheep? It's less embarrasing getting out of the back of a sheep..

Top
 Profile  
 
 
Posted: Wed Oct 24, 2007 4:14 pm 
Getting Side Ways
Offline
User avatar

Age: 71

Posts: 3555

Joined: 7th Nov 2004

Gallery: 4 images

Power: 482 rwkw

Location: Penrith
NSW, Australia

Yea just petrol, Kerro etc....
Being thin alloy you don't want anything too corrosive....
My Lexus 1UZ alloy block looks crap since cleaned with degreaser.. I guess it wasn't washed off properly???

 

_________________

As in ZOOM 126 edition
331 Dart block,3.25/ 4340 steel crank, Oliver rods,TFS ported track heat heads, TFS track heat inlet Twin SC61 turbo's
Project 1UZ-EF has started.. S475 Turbo 4.0 V8 Mustang Celica.....

Top
 Profile  
 
Display posts from previous:
Sort by  
 Page 1 of 1  [ 13 posts ] 

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 32 guests


You cannot post new topics in this forum
You cannot reply to topics in this forum
You cannot edit your posts in this forum
You cannot delete your posts in this forum
You cannot post attachments in this forum

 

 

It is currently Tue Dec 24, 2024 4:58 am All times are UTC + 11 hours

 

 

(c)2014 Total Web Solutions Australia - Australian Web Hosting and Domain Names