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Archibald Tarquin Blenkinsopp Esq[_2_] Archibald Tarquin  Blenkinsopp Esq[_2_] is offline
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Default Using phosphoric acid on sheet steel

On Fri, 23 Aug 2019 18:38:47 +0100, Jeff Layman
wrote:

On 23/08/19 14:39, David wrote:

Worth considering using some strong plastic sheeting to rest the BBQ bits
on whilst you are treating them. Acid tends to rot most things it comes in
contact with, especially clothing.


It's not the rotting which would concern me - it's the splashing of the
ferric phosphate (formed when the rust reacts with the phosphoric acid).
Any porous surface, including clothing, wood, stone, etc will get
stained and such stains will never be able to be removed completely.


?? As suppled phosphoric acid was clear. I can't recollect having my
clothing or cleaning materials stained.

It turns your fingers black after a while, but it's not permanent.

Not sure how it would work with a barbecue though. Phosphoric acid is
not used to remove rust. It is a rust "converter". The stuff turns the
oxide coating into a phosphate, preventing further corrosion. Whether
this would be effective on a sheet mild steel barbercue, I wouldnt
like to predict.

The adverts in the 70's told fibs incidentally, it does nor "turn rust
into good metal" :-)

AB