Goof info. I've been using Evaporust for years. I looked up Rust 911. It's $45 for 4 gallons. But the stuff that makes 16 gallons is only $80. I will say my Evaporust has been working for years and I have never changed it. It also needs/wants warm water.
Don’t use distilled water! It makes a big difference. Distilled water is lacking minerals, and will try to replace them by dissolving things it contacts, like iron for example. distilled water is actually quite corrosive, and will reduce the effectiveness of the rust remover significantly.
I have used both since this video and haven't been able to tell any difference, so I'm just using tap water now for no better reason than that it's cheaper 😁
Goof info. I've been using Evaporust for years. I looked up Rust 911. It's $45 for 4 gallons. But the stuff that makes 16 gallons is only $80. I will say my Evaporust has been working for years and I have never changed it. It also needs/wants warm water.
Don’t use distilled water! It makes a big difference. Distilled water is lacking minerals, and will try to replace them by dissolving things it contacts, like iron for example. distilled water is actually quite corrosive, and will reduce the effectiveness of the rust remover significantly.
I have used both since this video and haven't been able to tell any difference, so I'm just using tap water now for no better reason than that it's cheaper 😁
Is that 5-gallon bucket you used?
And did you use the entire jug of concentrated mix in that bucket?
That is a one-gallon bucket with 8 oz of the concentrate added to it.
@@perpetualmotion1 thanks
The black is carbon being brought to the surface out of the steel
Nope, the black is FeO, another iron-oxygen compound that is not rust, and can be mechanically removed.