An Engine

Anthony O.

New member
Now this engine is not very dirty to begin with but it's all I had at the time, besides it is for demonstration basically.



Here is a few BEFORE shots.



My aresenal of tools



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Dirty front fans and grill



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A somewhat dirty engine



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Used Hi-Temps APC to clean the engine, English Custom Polish for metal work and Best Dressed to dress out the engine, along with Sprayways Auto Shine. I also used my steam vapor cleaner on the front fan section.



Here we have the grill and fans AFTER



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And the engine



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Last one



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Thanks,

Anthony
 
Anthony,



When you use the APC I imagine you spray it everywhere, agitate areas with your brushes and then lightly rinse with water. Correct or not? Do you cover electrial connectors, especially on older cars where snap fittings are old and baked? Thanks for the post. Water and cleaners getting into the snap fittings and wires has always been something I "worry" about. I guess I would really rather see you using these products and learn that way, but....what is the reality of using cleaners in the engine compartment?



Marty.
 
A somewhat modest improvement....mostly because the engine looked pretty decent to begin with. ;)



There did you get that blue bristle brush?
 
MartyGrant said:
Anthony,



When you use the APC I imagine you spray it everywhere, agitate areas with your brushes and then lightly rinse with water. Correct or not? Do you cover electrial connectors, especially on older cars where snap fittings are old and baked? Thanks for the post. Water and cleaners getting into the snap fittings and wires has always been something I "worry" about. I guess I would really rather see you using these products and learn that way, but....what is the reality of using cleaners in the engine compartment?



Marty.



yeah, could you give more detail to how you cleaned the engine? there seems to be a lot of electrical connectors and such to worry about. and cleaning the engine is something i'd like to try on my car except i worry about all the electrical stuff underneath the hood. then again, if i wiped it more often then maybe i wouldn't have to worry about spraying water onto the engine to clean it. :p
 
I'm always amazed at how nice your engine details look. Yeah, it was clean to begin with, but I noticed a difference with the fans, it looks much cleaner. :xyxthumbs



It's nice to see your EZ Detail brush is still intact, I've had the handle break off of two of them already.
 
MartyGrant said:
Anthony,



When you use the APC I imagine you spray it everywhere, agitate areas with your brushes and then lightly rinse with water. Correct or not? Do you cover electrial connectors, especially on older cars where snap fittings are old and baked? Thanks for the post. Water and cleaners getting into the snap fittings and wires has always been something I "worry" about. I guess I would really rather see you using these products and learn that way, but....what is the reality of using cleaners in the engine compartment?



Marty.



Sure thing. Start with a slightly WARM engine, not too hot as to where the cleaner just evaporates, but rather just let the engine idle for a few moments.



I am using a water based APC mixed on the low strength side because the engine was not all that bad. So you may need to mix a hotter solution if your engine is caked with grime.



On older engines you may need to cover sensitive electrical parts like plugs and their wires, distributor cap, etc. Usually a plastic baggie secured with a rubber band works great. On many newer models the engine is encased in plastic. On this particular engine I covered nothing.



I first rinse down the outer sections of the car, mainly fenders, so that the cleaner does not have undiluted contact on the surrounding paint. Start spraying the cleaner in the lower sections of the engine first, allow it to dwell for a few minutes then begin to agitate with your cleaning brushes.



This is where the EZ Detail Brush is just plain awesome. In the below pictures you can see just how well it gets deep down into all those trouble spots.



ezcln3kc.jpg




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I clean and rinse as I move along. In the rinsing you do not need tons of water pressure, just enough water to rinse away the loosened grime.



I use a long sponge Qtip for the harder to reach areas.



328SpngQTp-med.jpg




I use a soft, flagged, brush to clean all the engine paint work. It also works great for engines like this that need only a light cleaning on the top surfaces.



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After the final rinsing you can blow dry the engine with an electric leaf blower and/or an air compressor.



Then if you so desire you can polish up the metal components, like clamps, rings, metal A/C lines, etc. On this Mercedes engine I repositioned many of the clamps so that more of the ring is shown, like this-



328LsnClmp-med.jpg




I would then move the clamp screw head down so that it can still be reached but so that it is also out of eyesight and you can really only see the chrome ring. It is just more appealing this way BUT do make sure that you tighten the clamps well after you're done!



After this comes the dressing. I prefer a water based dressing, the one I used here is "Best Dressed". Very economical and can be used for various applications.



I spray the engine down thoroughly with the dressing, open the hood and allow it to soak in while I give my attentions to other areas. Come back later and then lightly buff the dressing out. Usually a water based dressing will dry to the touch and with a low sheen, which is what I prefer. A wet dressing will only attract more dirt and grime:nono



Add some wax/polish to the paint work, vacuum the firecloth material, clean up the underneath parts of the hood and you're done!



For all interested this is where I got the EZ Detail Brush

http://www.topoftheline.com/ezmotdetbrus.html



Thank you for the comments and I hope this helps some,

Anthony
 
Anthony- Very, uhm, motivational :D



FWIW, I must say I'm finding more uses for the EZ Brush than I had expected. One of those "must-have" items IMO.
 
FWIW-

·Remove any excess debris; leaves and etc form the hood, grille or air-vent openings.

·Spray all electrical connectors with WD40, which repels water.

·Use cling-film or Saran wrap elastic covers to cover any sensors, electrical black boxes, electrical devises that could cause an electrical short-circuits if subjected to water spray.

·This will not guarantee that you wont cause a problem when cleaning an engine bay but it will greatly reduce the risks.

Start and run the engine to get it warm, not hot, this will enable the de-greaser to work more efficiently on a warm surface.

JonM
 
thanks for the details, but sorry, i have one more question.



for the intake runners, did you just clean them with the APC and then dress them with the "Best Dressed"? or did you first polish it with the English Custom Polish, and then dress it? and are both products from Top of the Line?



thanks!
 
hirosh said:
thanks for the details, but sorry, i have one more question.



for the intake runners, did you just clean them with the APC and then dress them with the "Best Dressed"? or did you first polish it with the English Custom Polish, and then dress it? and are both products from Top of the Line?



thanks!



My first step was to clean them with the APC, I then polished them and then dresed the metal rings and parts. Some people prefer to polsih the metal first and then de-grease the engine and then dress.



The reason for this is if they happen to get any metal polish on the black parts they can clean it when they degrease the whole engine. The drawback to this is you may end up scratching your polish job when you scrub the engine clean.



After I polish the metal then dress the engine I just go back and wipe off the dressing from the metal parts. I have been doing it this way for some time so I rarely get any polish on the black rubber parts, if so just wipe it off quickly and it will not stain.



The Best Dressed is for sale at Top Of The Line. Look for an upcoming review of English Custom Polish, should be tonight.



Hope this helps....here is one last picture, a close up of the intake areas.



328PlshdClmps-med.jpg




Anthony
 
Is this the dressing you were talking about? I was thinking about ordering it when I put my TOTL order to together, but it doesn't actually say it's waterbased. If that's not the one, could you link to the one you're talking about? Thanks.
 
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