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| Registered Join Date: Oct 2016 Location: Kansas 
					Posts: 1,254
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				What can I use to clean caked on oily grime?
			 
			I have a ton of black, oily crud from the oil filter being changed and not cleaned up from the drips.  30 years of road debris mixed with oil makes for a mess. What can I use to clean all of this crud? Keep in mind I'm doing this from my 2 car garage... so I don't have access to take this to a professional restoration shop to have the body stripped and sand blasted. Can I use a high pressure water cleaner? or some chemical mix with a toothbrush? Or a combination of the 2 with some high pressure air? Thanks! | ||
|  11-25-2016, 03:15 PM | 
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| Detached Member Join Date: May 2003 Location: southern California 
					Posts: 26,964
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			Try aerosol brake cleaner
		 
				__________________ Hugh | ||
|  11-25-2016, 03:18 PM | 
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| Registered | 
			I use kerosene in a spray bottle and a brush. rinse with water between scrubbings. Brake cleaner will take off the paint
		 
				__________________ 82 SC , 72 914 | ||
|  11-25-2016, 03:30 PM | 
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| Registered Join Date: Oct 2016 Location: Kansas 
					Posts: 1,254
				 | Quote: 
 Is it safe to just hit it with a high pressure washer? | ||
|  11-25-2016, 04:02 PM | 
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| Reiver Join Date: Nov 2011 
					Posts: 57,493
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			Original Gunk
		 
				__________________ De Oppresso Liber Strength and Honor 5th Legion | ||
|  11-25-2016, 04:13 PM | 
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| gduke2010 | |||
|  11-25-2016, 04:26 PM | 
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| Project Addicted Join Date: Jul 2012 Location: Eastern Shore. MD 
					Posts: 919
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			Elbow grease. A few plastic scrapers and I like the original gunk too. I also have one of the home steam cleaners and it's the bomb for final clean and it get all the crap out of the nooks and crannies.
		 
				__________________ Jon 1966 912 1976 911 3.4 Backdate Project 1986 944 | ||
|  11-25-2016, 04:29 PM | 
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yes i usually use a toothbrush. brake cleaner is not only too corrosive but it evaporates right away. it works great for final cleaning of bare metal surfaces but anything else there are better options
		 
				__________________ 82 SC , 72 914 | ||
|  11-25-2016, 04:32 PM | 
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			Post a photo please.    Learn to post photos for all your questions. You will get better answers. Simple Green is a favorite here. You can get a gallon of concentrate (lasts for years) for $10 off Amazon. https://www.amazon.com/Simple-Green-Industrial-Degreaser-Concentrated/dp/B01MAYGHY5 
				__________________ 1986 Bosch Icon Wipers coupe. | ||
|  11-25-2016, 04:53 PM | 
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			I used diesel on mine, on a bunch of old towels. it worked pretty good.
		 
				__________________ A nose heavy airplane flies poorly, a tail heavy plane flies once. | ||
|  11-25-2016, 05:16 PM | 
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| Registered Join Date: Aug 2009 Location: NYC 
					Posts: 415
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			Orange oil based  tar remover Karnak you can buy a spray bottle at your local Home Depot lowes where they sell the roofing materials works like magic
		 
				__________________ Scott 88 911 G50 3.2 Targa Signal Red DP935 NA 95 993 C2 Coupe Black/Black 99 996 C2 Silver/Blue 77 911S GP White/Cork | ||
|  11-25-2016, 05:56 PM | 
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			I've had good luck with Simple Green and Pinesol (both non-diluted - apply straight, soak, scrub with a brush, rinse away with water, repeat). Spray-on engine degreaser is also effective, but I always seem to use a lot more of this than Simple Green or Pinesol. | ||
|  11-25-2016, 06:41 PM | 
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			I recently removed the rear bumper from my 77 targa to replace the oil lines and exhaust. A leaking oil tank sending unit allowed dirt and oil to accumulate everywhere- especially inside the valence and bumper.  I used a plastic scraper (putty knife) with Purple Power cleaner.  I love the PP cleaner but you must be careful because it contains lye.  I buy it in gallon containers from Walmart.
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|  11-26-2016, 02:58 AM | 
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| Registered Join Date: Sep 2008 Location: Los Angeles 
					Posts: 685
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			I cleaned 48 years of thick, nasty funk on my transmission to a sparkly, shiny, like new standard with paint thinner and a toothbrush. Worked very well.
		 
				__________________ 2001 986 S | ||
|  11-26-2016, 07:51 AM | 
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| Registered Join Date: Oct 2016 Location: Kansas 
					Posts: 1,254
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|  11-26-2016, 08:37 AM | 
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| Air Cooled-6 | 
				
				Cleaning Grime
			 
			I have found WD-40 to work pretty good. Its a penetrant oil that can dissolve crud -- also its not harsh on anything. I've even used it to clean grime bits off of my exterior paint.
		 Last edited by Rumble-Bee; 11-26-2016 at 10:35 AM.. Reason: spelling | ||
|  11-26-2016, 10:34 AM | 
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| Air Cooled-6 | 
			Whoa there! Reminds me of my 70 911T that had a leaking rear main for a long time. I bought a cheap power pressure washer from Harbor Freight, and that was just the ticket to get all the thick caked on crud off my engine, trans, and engine compartment. I could have eaten off that trans when I was done. Be really careful NOT to hit any painted areas that you care about with the stream (or any body parts you value). I used plain cold water with no cleaners added. Cleaner additives may have helped. My only complaints about the power washer was that: 1) You're going to get very wet 2) All of that crud comes off in chips that get scattered everywhere, then they were stuck to my driveway -- I should have used a big tarp to protect it. 3) Wear eye protection & clothing you won't mind discarding For finishing touches I used WD-40 & a part brush (toothbrush is OK too). | ||
|  11-26-2016, 10:50 AM | 
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| Registered | 
			Funny about the picture.    OP said the oil filter, so I was wondering how much crud we were really talking about back in the engine bay. I've never looked back there. Do you think that's from oil filter dribblings, or from leaking oil pipes? 
				__________________ 1986 Bosch Icon Wipers coupe. Last edited by sugarwood; 11-27-2016 at 07:32 AM.. | ||
|  11-27-2016, 07:16 AM | 
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| Registered Join Date: Jan 2016 
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|  11-27-2016, 07:21 AM | 
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| Registered | 
			When i use a pressure washer, i get an old piece of carpet and lay it under the car. It collects the greasy bits that fly off and i throw it away later. I pre treat with a spray bottle of paint thinner or diesel fuel. Safety glasses and a tyvec throwaway suit and rubber gloves.
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|  11-27-2016, 11:25 AM | 
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