Old rags | GTAMotorcycle.com

Old rags

bigpoppa

Well-known member
How do ya'll clean old rags that you use wipe chains or clean up oil/grime around the garage?

Assuming throwing it in the washing machine is a no-no with all the chemicals/carcinogens + wife aggro...
 
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Never a shortage of rags. I cut old t shirts, towels, etc.. to the right size and keep them in a large drawer in the garage.

At one point spouse tells me I need new shirts, things are getting old, worn looking. So I say OK, just go through my closet and drawers, pull out the stuff you think is old and should be thrown out. An hour later she is finished and I come back to see about 2/3's of the clothes I own is sitting in a pile on the bed. Rags for years.
 
Be careful when throwing out old rags.
Maybe not so much with just chain oil etc.

I have a friend who was staining his newly built gazebo and threw some old rags into a blue bin in the back yard.

15 min later. He has an inferno in the backyard.
New gazebo had burn damage, bricks needed to be replaced on the house and 2-3 windows and door also needed replacing.

He rewatched it all on the security camera untill it melted itself.

Chemical reaction don't only happen in movies.
 
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Be careful when throwing out old rags.
Maybe not so much with just chain oil etc.

Good point.

When I put my oily rags in the garbage bin I lay them out flat so they don't have an opportunity to heat up and self combust.
 
If I have oily/gassy/solvent rages, I spread them out for a few days to evaporate before I put them in garbage. Pily rags never go straight to garbage . They also never get washed. Oil/grease is the last step before garbage.
 
Good rags IMO are cotton as they are absorbent. Some synthetics tend to be oil spreaders.

If the item is really caked in grease I start with a scraper then less desireable rags. Old socks work as well for the second go around. Work towards soft cotton for a final wipe.
 

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