Cosmoline removal WITHOUT boiling water?

I have never used water

get a shallow pan and some paint thiner/varsol/mineral spirits and a paint brush or dish brush and go at it.

if you soak it first it will go faster.
 
Thank you all ladies and gentlemen! I was unaware that the hot water will evaporate quickly w/out the use of a compressor. I think ill try this method!
 
Boiling water will evaporate almost immediately.

Ive cleaned my SKS with it over a dozen times now without drying it and have no rust issues, it dries itself.

Done mine a few times this way as well , water evaporates real fast then I give it a quick blast of wd-40 and a wipe . Make sure there's no wood getting wet as the varnish will go cloudy .....
 
For most of the small parts I use (Outside) Kerosene in a double boiler type setup (Glass mason jar or something glass) in a bath of water in my sonic cleaner.
 
Soak it in simple green then scrub and rinse with boiling water. I know it says without boiling but boiling water will evaporate quick on the steel. The cooler the water you use to rinse‚ the more residue that will remain. (In cracks and other places you can't see. Boiling or extremely hot water is the way to go)

Edit. Ahhhh. Always late to the party. I see what I said was explained already. But yeah. Simple green is good stuff.
 
boiling water is the best way to do it, heats up metal, leftover water evaporates. I have bathed my SKS 10+ times and no issues at all, just need to dry and oil before reassembling. On a new rifle, boiling water is way better than using chemicals, get a aluminum turkey pan for a 1$ at the grocery store. Cosmo melts at whatever temp. The boiling water will melt and wash it all off the metal. Don't make a mountain out of a molehill. :) happy cleaning.. I have an SKS on the way from Corwin. that's all its gonna get.
 
Sure - a wallpaper tray full of mineral spirits or varsol. Insert rifle, let soak, then scrub.

I've used vehicle drip trays and plain old gasoline to de - cosmo a bunch of AKs before; it was very very efficient, but I'd sure not want to do it again.


I used a 30" plastic planter (similar to window box planter) and soaked all metal parts in varsol. Let it soak for a day. Then wipe and oil.
 
Home made easy bake oven. Metal garbage can with a shop light hung inside. It will sweat out. Mineral spirit to wipe clean.
 
I can see requiring a combination of varsol, turpentine or some spirits, with boiling water as well on a newly acquired rifle, that are caked in cosmoline, but after the initial cleaning, boiling water and a wipe down with oil is all it needs.
 
^^^Thats what I do, everything but the barrel/reciever soaks in low odour varsol till I'm done wiping down and pouring boiling water through the barrel and reciever a few times. Then I remove the parts from the varsol and pour boiling water over them. Wipe dry and oil. I'll run a patch through the bore and if there's any leftover Cosmo I'll hit it with boiling water and hoppes9.
 
2 x metal garbage cans
a heat lamp fixture with clamp (or some way to mount a bulb inside if you don't want to drill holes in one of the cans)
1 x 60w incandescent light bulb
Some sort of grate (old BBQ grill worked great)
Some wood blocks to put under the grate.

Place 1 garbage can right side up, put your wood blocks in the bottom to keep the grate elevated and put the grate on top. Put your disassembled rifle in the garbage can. Mount the lightbulb inside the garbage can in whatever method you would like. Invert the second garbage can and place it on top of the can with your parts. Optionally you can wrap the "seem" with some old cloths or vent tape to keep more heat in. Let it bake. The metal will come clean relatively quickly but it can take quite a while for the cosmo to leach out of the wood. 4-6 hours has done the trick for us.
 
Cosmoline isn't removed with any kind of water. It's thick petroleum jelly. Boiling water or steam cleaners will melt it, but not remove it completely.
Mineral spirits is American for Varsol. snicker. Any degreaser will do, but Varsol is cheap and easy to get.
Gasoline or diesel fuel, aside from the excessive cost and inflammability, is hazardous to one's health. No used degreaser should ever be disposed of down any drain either.
 
And varsol is reusable, I've cleaned four red rifles with the same varsol, pour it back in the jug and the grease solids fall to the bottom. I've got two more to do and will keep using the same jug till it's no longer doing its job. Just have to remember which is my clean varsol and which one I use for cosmoline.
 
Mineral spirits is American for Varsol. snicker.

Good info as usual, ding dong... They're interchangeable, but not the same. Varsol stinks more, for one thing.

http://www.recochem.com/faq/paint_thinners_solvents

What is the difference between Mineral Spirits and Paint Thinner? What other names is it known by?
Mineral Spirits has fewer aromatic solvents while other similar Products – Paint Thinner, Varsol® Paint Thinner – contain higher concentrations. Both are petroleum distillates and are generally interchangeable.

Any degreaser will do, but Varsol is cheap and easy to get.
Gasoline or diesel fuel, aside from the excessive cost and inflammability, is hazardous to one's health. No used degreaser should ever be disposed of down any drain either.

Yeah? Tell it to the Kandahar City Department of Sanitation. I'll stand by for the bylaw ticket.

Was the last time you bought Varsol in the 1970s? 'Cause now it's $12 for a 4l jug at CT, so only about three times as expensive as gasoline.

Can you not be even a little bit right, ever? Or at least not #### things up with advice that is 100% the opposite of reality?
 
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Simple Green HD and boiling water will get it cleaner than any other method. I have gotten SKS's and Mosins that have supposedly been precleaned and used the Simple Green HD and boiling water and had a layer of cosmoline sitting on the water afterward. You would be surprised how much is left behind by the solvent methods. If the metalwork still smells like cosmoline before you apply gun oil, then there is still cosmoline on it plain and simple. The Simple, Green HD is alot nicer smell and vapour wise as well. But to each their own. You can do multiple guns from one jug of Simple Green HD. A lot more expensive to use solvents.
 
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Can you not be even a little bit right, ever? Or at least not #### things up with advice that is 100% the opposite of reality?[/QUOTE]

Who's the ding dong here? That's some mighty pontification from a guy who still dumps hazardous chemicals down the sewer. I think you make sunray sound like a genius.
 
:rolleyes:

I'll try and be a little less cryptic in the future... As far as I know, Kandahar City doesn't, in fact, have a department of sanitation. No one, except for seagull, was talking about pouring anything down any drain; it was a complete non sequitur to which I responded with a complete non sequitur.

Don't stress Ms May, the fish are safe...
 
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