![Cool 8)](./images/smilies/icon_cool.gif)
Went out and picked up some free rebar from work, stuff that was left over when they poured the cement for our new freezer outside. 5 sticks of 10' rebar goes for about $5.00 a stick, so that's $25.00 saved.
Finally found a store that carries washing soda, and not knowing when I'ld find more (nor how long it lasts before you have to replace the water) I bought all 4 boxes.
![Laughing :lol:](./images/smilies/icon_laughing01.gif)
Got home and quickly setup a 5 gallon pail for a trial run. I just won some sport bumper brackets on ebay, and while they were coated with a fresh covering of shiny black paint, the seller didn't even bother to brush off the dirt before he painted them, and there was surface rust all over them. Figured this would be the perfect first test to see how it works, as it's supposed to take everything off, including some types of paint.
I also picked up a 70 gallon poly stock tub (with a drain on the bottom) that once set up, will allow me to do cylinder heads, intake manifolds, even engine blocks, completely submerged. The best part is it has a drain on the bottom, and I'm going to look for a solvent pump. My electrolysis tank is going to double as a "hot tank", too. Now I just need to find a dolly to make it mobile, before I get it fully set up.
pics to follow.
edit: for info on the do's and don'ts of electrolysis, and how it works, go here: http://antique-engines.com/electrol.asp