Rust inside a Thermos
Discussion
I left a quite expensive stainless steel flask in a hotel room. I phoned them up to ask if they had found it and if I could pay to get it shipped to me. However the hotel just said they’d send it to me (Highly recommend the Warwick Castle Hotel)
Unfortunately it was quite a few weeks before I got it and it must have been left on its side with a bit of water in it because it has a faint rust line down the inside.
I don’t think it’s penetrated into the body itself, just very much a light surface mark.
Is there any way to remove this? I’d struggle to actually get anything in the neck to scrub it.
Simpo Two said:
Which bit of the inside of a thermos flask is ferrous? I thought they were silvered glass. Or is that just old ones?
Err that was the old ones silvered glass in a plastic body OP statedDrawweight said:
I left a quite expensive stainless steel flask in a hotel room.
It's the air gap that stops the heat loss matters little what the constuction method was Either buy this go to your local nice pub and ask if they have a scoop of renovate powder. Put the powder in a full flask of warm water and leave to soak overnight. Rinse very thourghly with lots of clean water.
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Simpo Two said:
Which bit of the inside of a thermos flask is ferrous? I thought they were silvered glass. Or is that just old ones?
I guess by the fact he said it is stainless that it is made from stainless steel. Anyhow if I had bought an expensive stainless flask and it went rusty I would need to question the quality of the materials involved in construction and whether it was really worth the expense.ARHarh said:
Anyhow if I had bought an expensive stainless flask and it went rusty I would need to question the quality of the materials involved in construction and whether it was really worth the expense.
Stainless steel is no guaruntee of rust free - Most fittings on boats are stainless steel and will rust but just require a polish to removeCorrectly treated (Passivated) so a combination of a citric acid solution soak and sodium hydroxide soak creates a much more rouging resistant surface
(At work we mix qtys of saline solutions in Stainless Steel tanks up to 44,000 litres - rust on solution contact surfaces is not acceptable)
Just get some simple citric acid crystals from your local hardware shop (Wilkos was good when it existed) and put a heaped teaspoon in with some warm water and leave overnight then rinse. Job done.
....I've used this for engine block water jackets on numerous occassions, at a much stronger solution, and they come up like a new casting.
....I've used this for engine block water jackets on numerous occassions, at a much stronger solution, and they come up like a new casting.
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