Rust Removal Vinegar VS CLR **SHOCKING RESULTS**
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- Опубликовано: 22 апр 2021
- This is the EASIEST way to remove rust from tools, cast iron, and anything else you may need that has rust.
Vinegar has many uses but one of my favorite uses for vinegar is removing rust. However in this video I wanted to do a face off to see whether or not vinegar was better than products with chemicals that are intended and promoted as rust removers. The results in this video are shocking! check them out and subscribe to see more videos discussing the multiple uses for vinegar and other vinegar hacks.
Please, never put poison of any kind in a food or beverage container. I spent 8 years recovering from drinking CLR in water that my roommate had in a drinking glass when I asked my friend to get me a glass of water and he grabbed that glass. NEVER put poison in a food or drink container.
So the CLR doesn’t wash out in a dishwasher??
How much was in the glass? The bottles say it’s fine for cleaning coffee machines.
What this guy said. It happens more than one would think. People get seriously sick and die more than you would think from People putting chemicals or cleaning supplies in water pitchers glasses ect. I have no idea what clr is or how dangerous it is. However it's just a good rule of thumb. Really cool video. Now I'm on my way to pick up some vinegar. Thx for saving me some cash
😂🤣😂🤣 the fuck????
@@josephdarline660 😂
So, just a side note: vinegar IS an acidic item. Once you have cleaned the rust from your metal items using vinegar, rinse them in a water and baking soda bath. Then a light coating of 3 in one or wd 40, etc.
Thanks for that I've been given a lot of gardening tools and need to give them a good cleaning.
CLR is around $5.30 at Walmart (28oz). Cleaning vinegar (the good hard stuff!) is around $1.60 a gallon (64oz). And the vinegar will clean your countertops, stove and all, plus it's better in the laundry rinse than fabric softener, and it'll keep your drains from stinking too!
Agree!
You can buy cleaning vinegar that's 40 times the strength of distilled
Yep, vinegar is a good product and price. It's Safer if you're drinking the cleaners, like the folks in another thread here!
Ya'll Take Care, John
Over here in the UK, we don't have an extensive range of products in our supermarkets compared to you (America). But I'm sure I can find similar products online. Thanks for the video.
I have always used vinegar in my laundry rinse. Leaves my clothes soft and it cleans the washing machine.
Strongly recommend you put boiling water in the CLR glass about four times before you try to drink out of it. That stuff is bad news if you get it in your body.
It would be interesting to see what the second set of wire cutters after a follow up 24 hours in the vinegar after the CLR treatment. Good video!
Metal treated with vinegar must then be neutralized to prevent flash rust. A short soak in a baking soda and water bath should do the trick.
Muriatic acid is a diluted form of HCl and used to shock swimming pools. It is dangerous but will clean rust and concrete. It should beat vinegar. I doubt you will need to wire brush. Rinse completely. I would spray with penetrating oil afterwards to keep the surface rust from reforming.
From what I see vinegar may be able to be out cleaned by muriatic acid, but vinegar is the safest and cheepest.
sweet.. I been soaking paper towels in vinegar, covering in plastic bag, and its eatin rust off an old car.. I was curious about CLR and you just confirmed vinegar gobble rust better!
The CLR should have been mixed with water. CLR uses the H2O as a catalyst for penetration. Read the instructions on the bottle. They recommend mixing it 50/50.
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@@southernsalt Same thing with that Vinegar it needed water 50/50
And this is why specialists always tell you not to believe something just because its on the internet. Because you have unintelligent people posting things claiming them to be facts when in reality their stupidity made it their truth not a real world truth.... "heres your sign"
I had no idea about that thank you for sharing
I hope you cleaned everything up before your wife saw the results of your experiment.
Care must be taken when using vinegar to remove rust from items that are/ were chrome or zinc plated. If left a day or so the vinegar will remove the zinc/ chrome plating. The problem is that there are carcinogenic elements used in both chroming and zinc plating and these will now be floating around in the vinegar/ rust soup. The most dangerous is the gold coloured plating with the slight rainbow/ oil-slick effect on the surface. This is called hexavalent chromate and it is highly carcinogenic to the point that it was banned in many countries. So, extreme care needs to be taken when disposing of the used vinegar and anything it has come in touch with it.
Thanks for the info!
I like the effect, I didn't know it was dangerous, interesting
Wow. Makes sense to me. Thx.
Thanks 👍
I've plated small items using Aluminum foil and Coke a cola.
Great video. We use white vinegar to clean our coffee pot for the calcium build up, in the garage per my wife suggestion. White vinegar works but we put baking soda in the water and then use 0000 steel wool with motor oil on our tools. I wouldn't dare use my wife's glasses. Thanks again
I had a buildup in my tea kettle from the water. I put vinegar in the kettle, heated it up on the stove just to boiling . I then shut off the heat pulled it off burner and put 3 tbsp of baking soda in !! Soaked it in this over night. Took stainless steel scrubber to it , it completely dissolved. No CLR. Vinegar, rosemary, lemons, dawn dish soap and baking soda. Just thrown all into small bucket. Leave for 1 month to get concentrated, oven cleaner!! Works awesome and no more breathing in toxic fumes.
Nice!!!
Great helpful video! My grandparents had a thousand uses for vinegar! I use it constantly for all kinds of applications and I've never had great results with CLR. I watched your video and was curious about comparing the two. Thanks again!
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I've never had CLR work on anything, I knew which product would work the best before the test started. Vinegar is also my go-to for cleaning the bottom of the toilet.
Good deal!
Nor rust related, but I was always told to use vinegar to remove calcium (mineral) deposits on my boat. Hardly did anything. CLR just wipes them away. No scrubbing.
Yep, it's off my shopping list, advertising led me to expect miracles and all I got was meh.
@@patwalker9890. I find that it only works (on toilets) if all the water is drained and straight vinegar is used and allowed to sit for an hour or so. Not sure how you could get it to soak on your boat, but since the CLR is working for it doesn't really matter.
I always thought there was something other than CLR to clean rust! Thanks ☆
Real glad to find this vid. About to restore an old plane and brace'n'bit. Will defo try white vinegar first. Love the CLR colour though. You take care now.
This was really helpful for me as I'm preparing to replace a pipe. Thanks!
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Great video! Definitely helped answer the question between the two cleaners for me. Thanks! :)
Good deal!
Great vid as usual. I will use this
I have used vinegar in motorcycle fuel tanks to get rid of significant surface rust. It works beautifully, HOWEVER, the fuel tank then requires flushing out with hot water. Upon emptying the hot water and immediately using a heat gun to dry it out you are left with light flash surface rust. Your vinegar pliers appeared to have surface rust also after your final rinse. What I did after flushing and drying my fuel tank was to use evaporust which reacts with the raw steel and keeps it from rusting after flushing out that material. The evaporust is saved and is good for multiple rounds of doing this process. I'll put up a video on my channel soon doing another RZ350 fuel tank.
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Very informative. Thk u!
Thanks 4 the video! I love 2 both save money and not use chemicals 4 anything. I am looking 4 something that stops rush stains from rusted nails on exterior walls b 4 painting. Not sure if vinegar will do the trick because it is a liquidy liquid so 2 speak and I need something that will not just run down the side of the house.
Thanks a bunch for this! You saved time, money, and and gave a great show. Tell the wife we said thanks for sacrificing the beer mugs. You got a subscriber just because I woulda done the same thing Brother! Lol
Lol hell yeah brother, appreciate it!!
Excellent. Thanks for a nicely made and informative video!
Thank you!
My brother in law found a old ax head bared in the dirt. It had about 1"1/2 or more of rust on it. He soaked it white vinegar for 3 days and it came out looking almost brand new. It was amazing.
Vinegar is amazing for so many things !
I use white vinegar for drain cleaning, shower head cleaning, window cleaning and it’s the absolute best and so cheap. I also rinse my hair with apple cider vinegar and water after shampoo and conditioner and it makes my hair frizz free, shiny and so soft. Magic stuff! Great video….I’ll definitely use vinegar on any rusty stuff.
That’s awesome to hear all the uses you get out of it!
Azchemistry shampoo
For hair - mustard oil and sunlight?
TWO THINGS... 1. I would have been curious to see if the vinegar would have succeeded on the second pliers where the CLR failed. 2. Zoes Kitchen is GREAT!
The tools were also two different models my two different makers and likely even two different metal compositions. I still agree, the vinegar is probably better (stronger) though and maybe more destructive if not careful.
Thanks for the video! CLR works amazingly well as contact cleaner on copper. HD has 30% concentration vinegar.
10-4
Good video. Thanks for the tip. Just curious how would coke compare?
Thanks for sharing. Will try vinegar on my motorcycle handles. In my opinion from what I saw I'm going with the vinegar.
I've used vinegar to clean out gas tanks with great results. Thanks for the video
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When it comes to cleaning a coffee maker I find that using the citric acid or coffee maker cleaner to work a lot better than vinegar. As soon as I dump the used chemical solution in the sink it brightens the metal a little bit. It also cleans up the drain. Our drain is at least 30 years old and lost its chrome plating somehow but the underlying metal still cleans up nice as soon as any of those chemicals touch it. We have hard water and it can leave stains behind that seem like no amount of scrubbing can get them off easily. They are rust stains and some people have gone as far as to try to sand theirs away. I just use a good acidic rust stain remover that effortlessly cuts through those stains. It is a dangerous chemical but it is a lot better than scrubbing a stain like that. The stuff I use dissolves it before your eyes and is too powerful for tool cleaning because it might dissolve the whole thing leaving only any non metal parts behind. Your wife might not like you using those glasses for the experiment but apparently CLR is harmless once rinsed out since some people use it in coffee makers. I would not use just any chemical in a coffee maker, if it is not all flushed out in time it might cause damage internally. Also you would not want that in your coffee.
One suggestion: Try using the C.L.R. at a 50/50 mix with water. Because it is a dense liquid the water mix may help it to penetrate the joints better.
Thanks for the info I’ll give it a try.
Exactly..
CLR works better diluted..
I couldn't do a radiator flush with 50/50 C.L.R. with water. It would be too expensive. But it seems great for smaller projects. Thank you.
@@olblu8746: CLR at a 50/50 mix would probably eat the guts out of a radiator if not the entire cooling system. Much better to use a dedicated radiator flush.
What does the CLR say for directions on dilution? We don’t have CLR where I live.
Thanks for showing that to us.
They both seem to work good.
Great video thanks for sharing
Vinegar is has so many uses. Never thought of using for rust removal. I use vinegar as a cleaner for my hot tub when I empty it for cleaning.
Definitely has many uses!
I had a massive leaking somewhere at the top of the water pump. I was going to use a "Stop Leak" product but wanted as clean of a surface as possible.
I used about 1/2 cup of CLR, topped-off the radiator with a minor amount of water (it's already small, only 1.5 gals.), drove the car a few blocks. I added more water when I got home so overnight the dripping would allow the CLR to flow through wherever it was going through.
Went out at 8am. VERY little water in the catch pan under the car. Poured that out, watched for dripping but there was NONE, not ONE drop.
Drove a few blocks, parked back home. at 10:15am I went out and the catch pan was DRY!!
I have no idea what the CLR did..... but my car now no longer leaks!! SO weird.
UPDATE:
Drove to the auto parts store for a fw items. No drips under the car. Stopped by the bank, then came home. Still no drips and the temp gauge stayed centered between Cold and Hot, perfectly centered. Ran the heater all the time I was out (not fun on a warm day lol ). So even with a heat-pressurized system, it still didn't leak!!
i wonder if it was a clogged thermostat that was bubbling the coolant and out the coolant reservior vent unless you literally watched a leak from the water pump housing...i bet the CLR dissolved the blockage or stuck thermostat
Clr will break rust down into fine particulars which will clog the leak. Many of the stop leak products do exactly that, except they add sand and grit and don't rely on breakdown of rust and metal.
White vinegar is also great for cleaning corroded battery terminals. Been using it for years.
Some people just like chemicals. I just watched your original video and I'm a 100% white vinegar user. I came across your video because I had a tiny bit of rust on my knife that I'll be using for a meat cleaver and I was already in the process of using my white vinegar as I watched your original video. Vinegar is a win all day everyday, even on black mold! Wipes it out completely whereas bleach feeds black mold. I clean everything with white vinegar. Cheap, safe, and effective! Great video comparison. 💯
Thank you!!
Great video man! Thanks for posting!
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Brother this was another great test you did. I Got my money on the vinegar. I am going to start using that on some of my truck tool. This will help me save money and stop buying new tools when they rust.
Man I’m telling you I wasn’t a believer until I saw it for my own eyes. It works amazingly well.
I have used vinegar and it always worked great for me 😊
I thought I was doing something wrong! I’ve tried Lime Away, CLR and other supposed chemicals for rust, lime etc. and they have never ever worked! I would have never thought to use vinegar on rust I use it for tons of things thank you!!!!
Thk u! I’m going to try the vinegar. May add a little bit of baking soda
I love the comments here but another thing I was wondering is if you mix them is it safe would it work better what would be a good ratio
Will it take rust out of pitting on an auto body ?
My experience with vinegar is that it removes rust great, but rust creeps back in very easy. Obviously oiling or treating it after can prevent this. Not sure how clr compares on that front. Clr is also harder to gett off hands, small issue.
It needs to be neutralized with baking soda immediately to avoid flash rusting then oiled or covered with a barrier spray.
1) Is flash rust a real thing?
2) does the vintage leave a permanent black stain to the metal or does it go away?
I just watched a video on Evapo-rust you might try that again the vinegar, but thank you for your video. I'm going to try the vinegar first ☺️🥇
I’ll be doing a comparison with evapo rust soon.
Warning - Vinegar evaporates quickly and will give you a headache in a confined space. I was using it in a corne6 but solved it by using an electric fan when working there. A lid on the bath will save a lot of vinegar. Also you can buy the 30% industrial cheaper and just cut it back to 6% with water. Thanks for the video.
I haven’t experienced this but thanks for sharing!
You must just be a Sandy. People put vinegar on food.
👀👀🤣🤣I rather get a headache than getting cancer from manmade poison 💩
Vinegar is what I use to mop my floors. No chemicals and no sticky tacky stuff to make my flip flops stick and bug me. Love it for cooking and cleaning. I came to watch a video just because I wanted to avoid using some harsh rust removers over something okay for kitchen use
I remember something called naval (navy) jelly; I haven't seen in 40 years, being used for rust removal.
Awesome...I have a chain currently soaking in a bucket of vinegar. Of note...soak the items in a baking soda and water mix afterwards to neutralize the effects of the acid.
Thanks!
Can you please give the ratio of baking soda to water?
I found your vid looking for a way to remove rust from my vinyl floor from a old cabinet that sat for about 6 years in my kitchen, I hope it works as well on floors on it does tools.
It should work fine, let us know how it goes!
Try ALDI grout cleaner.
Seen another video that said your supposed to go fifty fifty on clr and only a few minutes soaking. I do like the white vinegar though. 🤛🥋
You could use a cleaning strength vinegar that is available at Home Depot or Lowes . And that brush looks like it has brass bristles which won't scratch or very mild scratches . Or maybe to use a brush with stainless steel bristles that are much stiffer .
I have a vintage probably WWII era baking pan, about 15" x 24" long, heavy steel that says Lockwood 1944 on it, that is totally rusted. I found it in an Antique store.
I would love to clean it back to metal and polish it just for the history of it.
Try Evapo Rust -v- the white vinegar. I have used white vinegar many times, think it does the best for the cost.
Oh Heck Yeah!! Thanks so much!!
Vinegar is good to remove water deposits. You can spray it on your sink let it stand and wash it off with a sponge to get it clean. But I never thought that it would remove rust. This proves you do not always need strong chemicals to get something clean.
I've also used vinegar to eat mill scale off hot rolled steel sheets prior to painting them. The scale wipes off in 24 hours. Works great if you have a little time to spare. If time is money buy HRPO steel sheets.
I used paper towels to keep the vinegar in contact with the steel while using as little as possible.
Good info, thanks!
Thanks ! Great experiment...
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I usually use multiple dips. CLR, wipe down, then vinegar and lemon juice, etc. Muratic acid might work too
Yeah man I just dip it in vinegar for the most part and it does the job.
Mutation acid?
@@johngangemi1361 *muratic acid (autocowrecked)
I used white vinegar to remove rust from the exhaust headers on my F150. with minor wire brushing and a second overnight bath in vinegar they came clean and I primed and painted with 1200 degree paint. worked great. and will never use anything else. The reaction will eat aluminum so do it in a plastic pan and don't let the vinegar sit on concrete if you spill because it will damage concrete.
Good stuff!
For the fill valve on my washing machine, clr or vinegar?
I'd like to see how the vinegar performs against the CLR using a ultrasonic cleaner.
Great video. 🎉
I actually use used empty plastic gallon White Vinegar jugs. I just cut off the top at the natural indepth upper line. This makes for an effective container to hold rusted metal parts including firearms parts.
I also add Salt to the White Vinegar this creates a power acidic mix. Do this in open air, outside and let the sunlight heat it up for a few hours. Or place in a water tight metal deep pan on a hot plate. Note buy an water tight metal pan dedicated just for removal of rust from metal tools,firearms parts etc. Never use any such container again for preparing any food items.
Finally procesing.
I use number four (0000) steel wool to finalize the rust removal process on the various metal objects.
Then rinse and coat metal/ gunparts with hot water and baking soda let sot for a few minutes and lastly give a final rinse cleaning with hot boiling water.
Then quickly dry off the tools/ gun parts with use of a hair dryer, heat gun and or dry cloths or paper towels.
Lubricate the tools/ gun parts using good Oil to penetrate saturate the metal tool/ gun parts. You can also wrap the tool/ gunnparts in a shop towels soaked in oil Lubricant overnight put inside a clean plastic bag or in a safe place.
I think this guy is a lobbiest for the vinegar industry:)
If it works it works lol
😂
@@southernsalt vinegar not the most profitable industry! 😂
Big vinegar playing it’s game 😅
Larceny on a grand scale
I was surprised at the finished result of my water impregnated tool kit. I soaked everything overnight, not expecting to recover anything! You can see the chemical reaction almost immediately. Vinegar pickles the metal. If used on edged tools, vinegar restores the cutting edge, on rusty files vinegar brought the files back to new status, also cleaned up a 5/8 tap. I washed the solution off and oiled my resurrected tools as soon as I had washed them. CLR works too, just not as good. Of course I could have used liquid drane cleaner, but it requires more care when using caustic solutions.
After you get the files clean. Take a large chalk stick and run over the file. Will keep them from rusting . When you get ready to use. Take a wire brush to the file. Be sure to put the chalk back on the file. Learned this at a Navy training school.
Excellent video! Thank you.
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ive done quite a bit of derusting with vinegar what ive found is walmart great value vinegar will work but is slow use white house vinegar because its more acidic and works way better
that clr i would never use simply because mainly what i derust is cast frying pans or other food related items and i have a rule it if its not edible it has no use in food utensils and no washing an item doesnt remove all traces of a chemical thats why i only use food safe vinegar
For instant rust removal you can use CRC Brakleen Non-Flammable Chlorinated Brake Parts Cleaner. If I can I avoid chemicals like CLR. These chemicals end up in our water supply and that can be bad for our health.
Wish I would've seen this before wasting 20 buck on a jug of CLR, I always assumed it cleaned better but at best it doesn't seem to be any better than 3 bucks worth of vinegar
Yep, I’d be interested in getting your input on the CLR performance
Hey thanks I am having to clean up my oven racks as they are all rusted. I might go for the large bottle of vinegar. Because this item is a lot wider.
Good deal, let us know how it goes.
The CLR is thicker. Maybe that's why it penetrates less. Maybe better for plumbing than small tools?
I am for sure going to use the white vinegar 👍🏼thanks!
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Citric acid works well too. I did a whole car frame in it and did a video on it. I knew the vinegar would outshine that clr.
After I clean my old gas tank with vinegar and baking soda what should I apply in the tank after to prevent future rusting that is fuel safe?
@@soopagutt7890 your not going to be able to prevent future rusting without some type of plating or paint. I would put some type of oil on the inside and paint the outside.
Interesting attempt at comparing performance of the two solutions. Appreciate the effort. Perhaps to suggest some improvements to your side-by-side experiment: a) you had used two different tools; angle-cutter and linesman pliers; both tools should have been identical types with same exposure to obtain rusted condition; b) you should have used the same measured volume of each solution. Thanks for posting.
Yeah I know it wasn’t perfect I just wanted to keep it simple.
it's a comparison, not a rocket science moonshot.
I've got a rusty old drill press (the type you clamp a portable drill in) and if wire brushed it and sprayed it with rust converter. Now it won't slide at all! Any suggestions people?
When CLR first came on the market years ago it had a much stronger reaction and worked likely 50% better than the CLR today.
The CLR will have lasting properties the vinegar won't. However, the cost, the chemicals, and the hassle gives Vinegar the edge by quite a bit.
Great preparation and equipment
Thank you sir!
As a sidebar (because it will take a week or more) use a 10% mixture of blackstrap molasses and water (90% water). this is excellent and a gallon of molasses from the feed store will make 50 gallons of rust converter. you can de-rust huge projects. Works very well.
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I have used mollases BUT where it is rusty it eats into the metal. Cleaning wheel rims. And even after pressure washing off it goes rusty immediatly. I sand blast now. A lot easier on the metal.A friend used lemons,, does not eat alloy but again citric acid. Coke is good at cleaning brass and copper too. Will bring copper coins up nice [too nice]
Yea it did the job it worked on my big treble hook thanks a million
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How about for calcium and lime?
I allow my tools to soak no less than 24 hours for stuck tools. Sometimes for 2-3 days. I rinse them off and they are a greasy like black. Then I use dawn dish soap and hot water and give them a good wash to get them good as new! More soaking less elbow grease.
Can you use house exterior walls
I think CLR is good for water calcium, but rust I don't think so...But the vinegar won and It's hard to believe..Great demonstration...
All natural is best I wonder if brown vin. Would work.. love to see that!
I got a video comparing all types of vinegar with each other.
Rust exteriorwall can we use. Vinegar
Not doubting your results how does vinegar do on calcium and lime scale from hard water I know clr descales my shower head and makes it work properly after a short few hour soaking then filter through fine mesh strainer back to bottle for next time
Vinegar is very effective but I bought some clr on the clearance isle and tried it out and it did work very good for me too
Oh CLR definitely still works and if you got it by all means use it. For this experiment I just found that vinegar may be a better option
Good video, Thanks! I am concerned about what your wife might say about the staining on your deck table, also the drinking glasses. Would the White Vinegar clean the table top as well? Thanks for this video, I had no idea that such a common house hold product would be so effective at dissolving rust. Good to Know!
Lol no need to be concerned she doesn’t care 😂
I use Wally World (Walmart) house hold cleaning vinegar $1,78 half gallon works great
Thank you so much!!!! 💯💯💯💪😎👍💯💯💯
I am trying desperately to remove stains from a white fiberglass jacuzzi tub. ANY ADVICE TO get it clean is soooo very appreciated. I’ve used the “new version of CLR “ , bar keepers friend, comet, all types of cleaning products, scrubbing bubbles Lysol nothing will get it off I’m desperate I don’t wanna have to put in a $1500 new tub only to have it staying again. Any advice is so very appreciative. Thank you.
Clorox magic eraser
May l know, this white vinegar is the same as edible white vinegar that we consume or it's industrial use. Thank you for sharing.
Food grade
What if you mix chloor and vinagar?
Using the cleaning grade white distilled vinegar would have really impressed you if regular white distilled vinegar did. It's much more acidic and will float rust off in minutes
I did a comparison on here in another video using both side by side. Surprised at the results
I use C.l r. On shower heads 1x. A year. And bottom of cooking pots&pans. Use a scrubber or steel wool/copper. I'm going try using the vinegar instead. Because its cheaper. But being careful in how to dispose of the containment after used.
Let us know if the vinegar works better for you
I will use the vinegar; unequivocal from your demonstration that the vinegar outperforms the CLR. You should have used the same type pliers for both & the snips already had some movement though as this gives a fairer experimental setup.