Thanks for the encouragement!hashman wrote:Great work Rob, really enjoying this thread.
Karl
Cleaning has been the name of the game this week.
To avoid individually scrubbing every last nut, bolt and washer, I availed myself of some cheap chinese manufactured produce in the form of a tumbling cleaner. It came in the week and I loaded it initially with the parts from the dismantled throttle bodies. I read not to use crushed glass, due to the risk of silicosis. But I had some crushed glass to hand so I put that in along with some water and a squirt of washing up liquid to aid with grease removal.
I resolved to keep the glass wet and dispose of it before any dust could become airborne.
I was able to work in the garage on other things while the intolerable assault on my eardrums was going on in the background - not the tumbler, rather Radio 1 playing the latest Coldplay single.
After white noise from the tumbler had anaesthetised my coldplay-related aural injuries for a good three hours, it was time to release the pristine shiny metal parts from their vortex of infinite microabrasion.

Looking good, I thought!
Whenever I'm unfortunate enough to watch any "Aussie Gold Hunters" (and that is a lot more often than I would like to admit), I usually think to myself that you wouldn't catch me swilling around in a wet pan of sand for a few fragments of shiny metal. However that is exactly what I found myself doing for the next couple of hours. Some of the nuts and washers are so tiny that I had to spread the entire pot of sand out one grain thick, so I could see through it and be sure I was not discarding any valuable little nuggets of Porsche.
Once separated, I moved the items through a system of buckets within buckets designed to wash off the sand while simultaneously preventing any plughole-related mishaps. All in all a good result. Second batch went in today.

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