PabloPicasso
Well-Known Member
Is oxalic acid any good for cleaning encrusted bronze prop blades?
Phosphoric acid works .... but at stronger dilutions than coke![]()
Muriatic Acid (Hydrochloric Acid) is much cheaper but also more aggressive to the bronze. I use a 5 part water to one part HCl .... but I don't know the concentration of the HCl in the bottle. Keep an eye on it and don't leave it in the solution longer than necessary to soften the fouling. ALWAYS add the acid to the water NEVER the other way round or you could end up with serious acid burns.
I posted a photo a couple of days ago showing hydrochloric acid removing carbonate salts from a VHF aerial bracket. The bracket is aluminium, the fitting is stainless steel. All the salts were removed and neither metals was attacked.
Hydrochloric acid does not attack either brass or bronze, so is safe on virtually any prop or skin fitting. Unless buying from a specialist you will be unable to buy in greater strengths than about 20% but as brick cleaner probably less than that.
I posted a photo a couple of days ago showing hydrochloric acid removing carbonate salts from a VHF aerial bracket. The bracket is aluminium, the fitting is stainless steel. All the salts were removed and neither metals was attacked. Hydrochloric acid is generally less agressive than sulphuric and nitric because it is not an oxidiser.
I've always found the HCl attacks aluminium rather aggressively ....