OldTools Archive

Recent Bios FAQ

22595 Andy Cooper <acooper@i...> 1997‑07‑24 Bio : Andy Cooper
Bio : Andy Cooper

Hello esteemed Galoots, another lurker craves permission to join you on
the porch. I'm 35, married, live in Adelaide, South Australia and I hack
computers for a living, and wood for fun. I come from a long line of
non-woodworkers, and was quite happy mucking around with old cars before
I discovered this group. The garage is now the shop, and I need to start
on an outbuilding expansion program.

I own a small pile of semi-restored old saws, planes and chisels that
seem to have found their way home with me from various rust boutiques,
and still seem to spend more time sharpening and cleaning than making
shavings. My first projects were tresles, saw horses, and various other
bits and pieces for the shed until I gained a bit of confidence working
with the hand tools. I have built a window, and some shelving for
inside, but fortunately the paint hides most of the mistakes! For timber
I have been buying from a few salvage companies. Much cheaper for a
beginner if you dont mind digging out the occasional nail. My biggest
project so far is about to begin - A traditional workbench made out of
2x4 and 4x4 Jarrah (recycled floor and fencing timber). I've got the
vice hardware, the planes are sharp, the wood is there, all I have to do
is start. (I think I'll go and sharpen another chisel).

To add to the electrolysis confusion, I use a small 1 Amp power supply
that used to act as a battery charger for a burglar alarm. I connect the
item to be cleaned, place it in the electrolyte (Washing soda which I
think is calcium carbonate). I move the other electrode around until I
get the current to near 1 Amp. If this is still not enough, I just add a
bit more washing soda until the current is right. I tried the cheap
cheese grater trick - It lasted about 12 hours and now has so many holes
in it its barely holding together, so now I just use a chunk of sheet
steel. The quality of the electrical contact with the tool that's being
cleaned makes a huge difference in the current that will flow. If the
tool has a hole in it I use a nut and bolt to connect it with, else I
use a battery charger type alligator clip. Works like magic, with light
rust being totally removed in about an hour or two. Higher current may
speed up the process, but I wont know till I get a better power supply.
Another thing to think of is the quality of the DC that is being used.
Some cheaper battery chargers just do 1/2 wave rectification, without
much smoothing - not sure what effect a semi AC waveform would have on
the process. 

Anyway enough rambling for now,

See ya later,
 
------------------------------------------------------
Andy Cooper
acooper@i...
or
acooper@m...
------------------------------------------------------


22876 Ernie Fisch <ernfisch@p...> 1997‑07‑29 Re: Bio : Andy Cooper
** Reply to note from acooper@i... Thu, 24 Jul 1997 13:43:57 +0930

Andy,

Welcome and I hope some electrolysis types jump in here.   I didn't think you we
re supposed to remove material from the cheese grater.   Possible reverse polari
ty?   Someone who knows something please help.

OBTW you can sharpen only so much before you actually have to some woodwork. I k
now, I delayed for a quite a while but had sharp tools.   They are duller now an
d the floor is covered with wood chips and shavings.   Gotta sweep up again.

Ernie 
I'm not a collector, really. I'm just a user without enough time. (used by permi
ssion)


23062 Bob Johnson <margjohn@m...> 1997‑07‑31 Re: Bio : Andy Cooper
At 04:01 PM 7/29/97 MST, Ernie Fisch wrote:
You do lose material from the sacrificial electrode.  Don't know why.  I have
been using the broiler tray from a toaster oven and it is showing rust spots
like crazy.  The plating, chrome I assume, is being lost in the process.

Bob

>Andy,
>
>Welcome and I hope some electrolysis types jump in here.  I didn't think you
>were supposed to remove material from the cheese grater.  Possible reverse
>polarity?  Someone who knows something please help.
>
>OBTW you can sharpen only so much before you actually have to some woodwork.
>I know, I delayed for a quite a while but had sharp tools.  They are duller
>now and the floor is covered with wood chips and shavings.  Gotta sweep up
>again.
>
>Ernie
>I'm not a collector, really. I'm just a user without enough time.
>(used by permission)
>
>----------------------------------------------------------------


Recent Bios FAQ