On Nov 2, 11:33*am, Tom Francis - SWSports
wrote:
On Mon, 02 Nov 2009 09:17:21 -0500, Wayne.B
wrote:
On Mon, 02 Nov 2009 08:04:50 -0500, Tom Francis - SWSports
wrote:
I had a similar problem once a long time ago - back in the early '80s
on an oldish 20' Thompson. *Had a hell of a time with it until a
machinist friend of mine suggested using light machine oil (sewing
machine oil in fact) to help the process along.
There's a product called PB Blaster, available in just about any auto
parts store, which is very good at this. *There's another good one
caled Aero Kroil available on the web from Kano Labs:
http://www.kanolabs.com/
I like PB Blaster, but the problem is that you can't use use a
"little" of it - the way it comes out of the can, it's like a flood.
Yes! Another product that works very well is Mouse Milk. My uncle
raved about the stuff when he was an aviation machinist. I found a
supplier in CA and bought three bottles. It' penetrates REALLY well,
and the good thing is that it's in a plastic squeeze bottle so that
you don't get it everywhere.
http://www.skygeek.com/mouse-milk.ht...Fdpb2godf3KkKg