Where do y'all buy Eezox from? it seems to be "discontinued" at several of the major distributors. Just wondering. Thanks!
You can get it from Amazon. Don't they help support this site?
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B013XD7ED6/?tag=accuratescom-20
Where do y'all buy Eezox from? it seems to be "discontinued" at several of the major distributors. Just wondering. Thanks!
If you say so. I see rust on the Eezox plate, don't you? "A little bit rusty" is not unlike "A little bit pregnant".So I guess I’m still going with Eezox!
EbayWhere do y'all buy Eezox from? it seems to be "discontinued" at several of the major distributors. Just wondering. Thanks!
Ok so I’ve never used the specialist wd-40. I have used wd-40 regular on other stuff and I noticed it collects dust n grime. Is this specialist stuff different? I was just going with the one that rusted less. Maybe I should test specialist wd-40 to Eezox and see?If you say so. I see rust on the Eezox plate, don't you? "A little bit rusty" is not unlike "A little bit pregnant".
Compare the Eezox plate with, oh, say, the WD-40 Specialist Long-term Corrosion Inhibitor plate in the comprehensive test I linked to.
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I have ordered from the inventer’s website and since I live in AZ I order from a distributor out of I think Queen Creek, AZEbay
Cheers Rushty
If you say so. I see rust on the Eezox plate, don't you? "A little bit rusty" is not unlike "A little bit pregnant".
Compare the Eezox plate with, oh, say, the WD-40 Specialist Long-term Corrosion Inhibitor plate in the comprehensive test I linked to.
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Holy cow what a test I do sheepishly admit I hadn’t looked at the link befor. Makes my test look lame haha. I guess frog lube and wd-40 specialist are the ones.Please bear in mind the WD-40 Specialist Long-term Corrosion Inhibitor is not necessarily a good lubricant **, so other products may be better for moving parts. But as a pure protection against rust, it seems superior.
(** Go review the lubricity test results part of the article I linked to previously.)
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But as a lubricant, Frog Lube didn't fare very well in that test. However, I'm not sure how valid a test the lubricity part was, that's a more complex issue than a rust test.Holy cow what a test I do sheepishly admit I hadn’t looked at the link befor. Makes my test look lame haha. I guess frog lube and wd-40 specialist are the ones.
BTW, the steel you used doesn't look raw, it has a grey look, like it is coated with something.Holy cow what a test I do sheepishly admit I hadn’t looked at the link befor. Makes my test look lame haha. I guess frog lube and wd-40 specialist are the ones.
Mill scale.BTW, the steel you used doesn't look raw, it has a grey look, like it is coated with something.
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Uh huh. Which should probably be removed before testing corrosion protection products.Mill scale.
Not at all. Once moisture enters the picture, it quickly penetrates, and the steel starts to rust.Uh huh. Which should probably be removed before testing corrosion protection products.
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Why would we want to introduce a layer needing penetration before the rust starts? There is a random element then in play, in that the scale varies, both on a sample and between samples. You can see that in action by that way rust starts only in small random spots. In the test I cited the author took pains to rough up the surfaces to remove any possible substances between the steel and the ambient. In a controlled test of 46 different products that was only prudent.Not at all. Once moisture enters the picture, it quickly penetrates, and the steel starts to rust, not the mill scale.
Those random spots you see are areas sans the mill scale. Mill scale isn't a coating. It is the layer you'll find on all hot rolled steel due to the process.Why would we want to introduce a layer needing penetration before the rust starts? There is a random element then in play, in that the scale varies, both on a sample and between samples. You can see that in action by that way rust starts only in small random spots. In the test I cited the author took pains to rough up the surfaces to remove any possible substances between the steel and the ambient. In a controlled test of 46 different products that was only prudent.
Let me ask you: What steel part of any common firearm sports mill scale?
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But it's obvious the grey scale wasn't removed entirely, in fact the plates all look a dull grey overall to these aged eyes. Look at the plates in that other test, and read how he prepped them, and why.There was a coating. Not sure of what kind I think I originally got it at ace hardware. I did sand with 80 grit sand paper the places I tested before applying.