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I haven't had a problem with it.The rust remover is a whole different thing. However, it contains phosporic acid which will stain iron if used in small amounts. The Boeshield T-9 is a great product. Yes, it removes rust some, not great, but some. If you have a leak in your bottle (like me) and you set the bottle on your table saw, then it will literally eat pits into the cast iron table and react to form some funky crusty black iron oxide stuff that is really hard to clean off.My recommendation, buy the T-9 and hide the rust remover from yourself before you really damage something. Yes, it's sticky, but it even says on the instructions to rub it off quickly for a smooth surface. It contains a thin paste wax, so if you buff it a little it's even smoother.
If you maintain the surface with the spray after you clean it the first time, you won't have any rust even when Bubba comes to visit and rests both his sweaty hands on your table saw top while he talks.The lube spray goes on easily and leaves a really friction free surface without residue. I've used other products that either were way over priced for little bitty bottles, or had chemicals that the epa should check out. They were not nearly as good as this line either.
(and then drying the blade and spraying it with WD 40). For my application, I give Boeshield 1 star. I have a mixed option about this kit.I purchased it to remove a couple of rust spots from my table saw top. I did have to use it twice. If all you want to do is protect the cast iron top of a wood working tool, you would be much better off just using a furniture paste wax. Over all this part did the job and I should give it 5 stars.I use the blade and bit cleaner to clean resin from my router bits and table saw blades. However for table saw blades it is not much better than washing the blade warm water with Dawn dish soap.
It could be used to coat a metal product for long term storage. I would give it 4 stars.The Boeshield is OK.
I also sprayed some on the ruler for setting my fence, and it crinkled it up, and now the ruler is hard to use (OK, I should have thought of that and not over sprayed). So I like the product for them.
The rust remover works great. I am uncomfortable washing my router bits with bearings.
It had the bad effect of changing the color of the table saw top to a darker grey (OK who cares).
That works well.
You'd be better off using kerosene and a tooth brush.I was told that this product worked great on rust, well believe me when I tell you that it did more harm than it did help, it left my machinery with leopard spots.I'm very unhappy with the results, you would think that for $30 you'd get a better product. This product is crap.
I've been using T-9 for some years. It was even a good defense against a male dog's dislike of a metal bench and handtruck kept outside. It's too bad they're selling the kit and not T-9 by itself.The rust cleaner is average. The blade cleaner did clean but certainly not nine dollars better than a few ounces of Oil Eater, which cleaned gummy blades and bits lots faster.
You have to clean hard before you can use the tool. It does stay sticky a long while so don't spritz and expect it to be instantly usable. The best anti-rust protection comes after letting it dry in a thick film.I don't like T-9 on machine table tops except for storage, where it is the best thing EVER. The goo can get on wood and it takes strong solvent to get it out. It's sticky though. Of the three items, the T-9 is really worth the cleaner and rust buster put together.
Wet T-9 can stain cardboard boxes and fabric. If you live near salty water exposure, there's nothing better. Flitz cleans better and is more versatile. T-9 RULEZ when it comes to keeping rusty crusty away from anything metal.
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