SierraHotel
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- Haymarket, Virginia
The brandy went in the concoction. The drinking came after I was done (Captain Morgans, not the concoction). The information I got was as follows:
"Transmission fluid is a complex lithium soap. The Lithium allows the iron to react with the carbonyl groups in the acetone and soap. Without the lithium it won't react. The reaction is catalytic in nature, so once the carbonyls are gone or hindered from reacting, the reaction stops. The addition of alcohol helps because it absorbs water directly from the reaction and acts as an emulsifier in your transmission fluid-acetone mix. It effectively makes it a transmission fluid, acetone lotion."
Is it correct? Beats me, I'm no chemist. But I can tell you that it did work where nothing else did. The PB Blaster and WD40 Rust Specialist had been on there for two days (multiple applications) and all got a healthy dose of impact to try to get them down the threads. Nothing. Once the concoction was added, they came free...resistant, but they came free.
Yeah, I checked for the L and R...oh, um...about 20 times. I even tried tightening them in an effort to break the rust. I also pondered about 20 times if the L or R was correct and then started doubting I was going in the correct direction (sigh).
As for "scientific methods", I did spray half the lug nuts on each wheel with PB Blaster and the other half with WD40 Rust Specialist. I wanted to see if the WD40 was worth anything...no dice with either one, so I really don't know. By the time I got to the acetone/transmission fluid concoction, all thoughts of experimenting were gone, I just want the **** things off the wheels. I'd love to have an oxy/acetylene set up, a heavy duty professional torque multiplier, 1" impact gun (and the mega compressor to go with it), and about a billion other things...but sadly I am not independently wealthy, so I do the best I can with what I've got. Yep, its a $60 cheap Chinese torque multiplier...I figure I'll never need it again, but the $60 is cheap insurance to make sure I don't need it again.
The point of the original post was to share my experience with 12 very tough nuts, which hopefully will assist someone else down the road. Since I did not see any other posts about the concoction I used, I figured I'd share, rather than keep the secret to my self. Is it brilliant or bull****? Got me, I only know it worked for me.
"Transmission fluid is a complex lithium soap. The Lithium allows the iron to react with the carbonyl groups in the acetone and soap. Without the lithium it won't react. The reaction is catalytic in nature, so once the carbonyls are gone or hindered from reacting, the reaction stops. The addition of alcohol helps because it absorbs water directly from the reaction and acts as an emulsifier in your transmission fluid-acetone mix. It effectively makes it a transmission fluid, acetone lotion."
Is it correct? Beats me, I'm no chemist. But I can tell you that it did work where nothing else did. The PB Blaster and WD40 Rust Specialist had been on there for two days (multiple applications) and all got a healthy dose of impact to try to get them down the threads. Nothing. Once the concoction was added, they came free...resistant, but they came free.
Yeah, I checked for the L and R...oh, um...about 20 times. I even tried tightening them in an effort to break the rust. I also pondered about 20 times if the L or R was correct and then started doubting I was going in the correct direction (sigh).
As for "scientific methods", I did spray half the lug nuts on each wheel with PB Blaster and the other half with WD40 Rust Specialist. I wanted to see if the WD40 was worth anything...no dice with either one, so I really don't know. By the time I got to the acetone/transmission fluid concoction, all thoughts of experimenting were gone, I just want the **** things off the wheels. I'd love to have an oxy/acetylene set up, a heavy duty professional torque multiplier, 1" impact gun (and the mega compressor to go with it), and about a billion other things...but sadly I am not independently wealthy, so I do the best I can with what I've got. Yep, its a $60 cheap Chinese torque multiplier...I figure I'll never need it again, but the $60 is cheap insurance to make sure I don't need it again.
The point of the original post was to share my experience with 12 very tough nuts, which hopefully will assist someone else down the road. Since I did not see any other posts about the concoction I used, I figured I'd share, rather than keep the secret to my self. Is it brilliant or bull****? Got me, I only know it worked for me.