Chemical cleaning

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DonO.
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Chemical cleaning

Post by DonO. »

What is meant by this term, exactly? When a shop charges you for a “chemical cleaning”, what chemicals are used,specifically? What would a step by step process be? How much should one cost? How often should it be done? Could a player duplicate the results himself using a snake and the right chemicals?


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bloke
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Re: Chemical cleaning

Post by bloke »

It’s either a mild acid, or it’s whatever solution is used for ultrasound type of percussive cleaning.

In the past, ultrasound cleaners used some pretty effective stuff, which consisted of compounds including freon and trichloroethane. “Green” reg’s have required that they retreat to aqueous-based types of solutions.

The mild acid solution is far less expensive and - in my opinion - far more effective and safer for brass that features some rotting areas, but everyone has their opinions.

Obviously, if someone spends $15,000-$20,000 on some tuba-accommodating ultrasound rig, they’re going to not only champion that method, but likely also feel a great need to sell cleaning jobs.

When I stick my bare hand down in my acid solution to fish out a part which drifted out of the parts basket, the only place on my skin that might sting just a little bit is where I might have a cut or scrape, and I feel like I’ve got plenty of time to neutralize that acid on the surface of my skin. Yes, I could go get the rubber gloves, but it’s harder to find a stray piece - in the bottom of the huge tub - with gloves on.

The mild acid lasts and lasts, but does pick up a little copper in the solution over time. It can be mostly leached out by leaving a chunk of steel in the solution for a while. Otherwise, an older non-copper-leached acid solution can leave a very light coating of copper on non-lacquered surfaces - a coating which can be removed from slide tube surfaces, etc. with very light polishing… and – with school instruments that haven’t been treated particularly nicely (and when working with limited school repair budgets) – I just leave that negligible copper – when it occurs – in place.

The mild acid seems is easy on silver plated surfaces, and only very subtly might leave copper residue on silver, and only if left in the solution way too long.

With the strength that are generally mix my solution – by how much water dilutes it – I usually keep instruments in there for about ten minutes, but might put a few heavily-limed slides, rotors, or whatever back in after everything else has been taken out, and might even leave them in there for twenty more minutes. After that, I sort of give up and go ahead and chip off the remaining lime.

Obviously, chemical needs to be drained and rinsed off with a generous amount of water.
I have a huge old enamel elevated bathtub for rinsing, but - if it’s not inclement - it’s often easier for me to set a tuba body outside on soft grass and completely rinse it inside and out with a garden hose connected to a pasture hydrant.

Approximately three days after I took possession of that huge tuba I’ve been posting about, I did this big cleaning job, because it needed it, and not just because I thought “it might be a good idea”. Big tubas with a lot of parts – and with parts that fit with extraordinary precision - take more time than just about anything to clean…and not to mention that - when they are handmade - they are very thin and very easy to dent. It required hours to clean and reassemble that particular instrument, and – rather than maybe $80 - $100 bucks to clean a little 3/4 size 3-valve tuba – I would’ve charged someone else hundreds of dollars to do what I did for my own instrument.

That’s all I know, but if you ask me questions for which I do not know the answers, I’ll be glad to make up crap. 😎👍
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DonO. (Mon Apr 25, 2022 2:57 pm)
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Re: Chemical cleaning

Post by DonO. »

So it sounds like not a DIY project…
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bloke (Mon Apr 25, 2022 3:07 pm)
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Re: Chemical cleaning

Post by Ricardo »

So it sounds like not a DIY project…
You can do a very low cost chemical clean at home. IMHO the ‘put the tuba in a bath’ cleaning method isn’t effective, but the method below is. I never fill the tuba completely with water.

First get remove all slides, valves etc up to and including the main tuning slide. Wash them all in warm water with lots of detergent or degreaser.

Then try to wash inside the tuba, using detergent or degreaser, but only from the leadpipe to the main tuning slide. Get a cleaning snake, soaked in detergent and push it insides the slides and valve casings.

Hose off the parts and tuba with water.

Then get a bucket and soak all the removable parts in vinegar.

Whilst they are soaking splash the tuba from the leadpipe to the main tuning slide in vinegar. Use the cleaning snake to scrub the internals.

Let it soak for an hour.

Then wash off with water.

Then mix up a solution of baking soda and water and rinse all the parts and the tuba in baking soda (just our the solution over the tuba and the bits you scrubbed in vinegar).

Rinse off again with water, then dry and relubricate.

I have done this a few times and it does quite a good job.
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Re: Chemical cleaning

Post by bloke »

If I had to use cleaning vinegar (instead of what I use), I would try flood the valve section with (stronger than consumable) cleaning vinegar as well (not soapy water, which - in my estimation - won't do much). There are various sizes of rubber stoppers that hardware stores sell.

Many years ago (when I used the same solution that I use now - better than cleaning vinegar - but didn't have a tuba-sized tub full of solution), I did this, and it still leaked out a bit here-and-there.

Currently I have a 186 (which I'm offering for sale, probably, TOMORROW) in the cleaning solution tub...so I need to finish up this post and retrieve it.
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Re: Chemical cleaning

Post by Ricardo »

The method I listed above is not as good as a professional clean, but it’s cheap and combined with me being a follower of the Bloke method of cheap valve (lamp) oil saturation seems to avoid me spending an hour or so each way to drop off the tuba to the nearest shop willing to clean a tuba and then have to back a week later to pick it up
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Re: Chemical cleaning

Post by bloke »

A good detergent will clean out loose sludge – provided something (maybe even a human finger) gets at the hard to reach surfaces which collect it – such as the knuckles which feed into the valve casings - areas which are usually neglected by home cleaning jobs…

… but only some sort of acid will dissolve lime, and lime is what eats instruments up.

Using an acid on only the removable slides does sound good, but - if the slide bows are eaten up, they (if a currently made American/European model) are fairly easy to replace. What are difficult to replace are eaten-up parts on the instrument body itself.
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