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blooming_stone

Cleaning the Mixer

Blooming_Stone
18 years ago

I've borrowed an electric drum mixer and am loving it. When i picked it up it had two patches of concrete left in it. All hard. Now, you guessed it, the patches are getting bigger. What to clean it up with so that the mixer is better than new whan I return it?

I used 1 part Muriatic and 2 parts water (do as you oughter, add acid to water) when I got the mixer. it seemed to etch the leftovers but not really go at them. Would you use full strength?

What about regular upkeep? I've got great water pressure, and can almost get all the sticky hypertufa out - but not quite. Does anyone use a pressure washer? I could borrow one to see if I liked it, but this forum is much more immediate!

Mercedes

Comments (7)

  • davidmcdn
    18 years ago

    My mixer is clean as the day it was made about 30 years ago.
    I bought it from a guy who kept it perfect inside and out.
    He told me he kept the outside parts like the stand rubbed down with grease to keep concrete from sticking. There wasn't an ounce of crete on this thing when I bought it and it was used plenty.

    I find a couple shovels of clean hydro rock and water spun for a few minutes does the trick of preventing any buildup inside.
    I can set the angle so the rock reaches right to the lip as she spins.

  • Blooming_Stone
    Original Author
    18 years ago

    Thanks. I'll clean it, then put Crete-lease on the outside.

    What is hydro rock?

    Mercedes

  • davidmcdn
    18 years ago

    hydro rock is just clean screened to size crushed rock used as drain rock. You will see it everywhere used for paths. I have several sizes but use 3/4" in the mixer.
    It's what I have on the ground under the mixer as well 5-6 inches deep so I'm never standing in a pud of concrete mud, it flows down under the rocks leaving the rocks on top clean. So I just dump the mixer and carry on, no mess.

    You can use a chisel on the lumps in the mixer BTW.

  • club_53
    18 years ago

    I've had good luck cleaning up the mixer when I finish making a batch of hypertufa with the pressure nozzle on the garden hose and scrubbing with an old toilet brush. If something gets built up because I got lazy with my cleaning, I have bashed it (carefully) with a rubber mallet and the clumps fracture and come off. I think I will try that water/hydro rock tho!!

  • davidmcdn
    18 years ago

    Hi Debra
    I just dug a 6" deep pit about 5x5' square and filled it with crushed rock. My cement mixer sits on that.
    I just scoop a few shovels of the rock into the mixer when I'm done then dump them right back on the ground. All the cement water just goes straight down leaving the top clean.
    It solved the problem of my dogs tracking concrete mud everywhere and having it dry on their feet.

  • Blooming_Stone
    Original Author
    18 years ago

    My work space has 12" of 1" crushed rock for a floor. I'm pleased to see that this might be the best choice I made. The boat barn is slowly turning into a tufa studio.

    Mercedes

  • davidmcdn
    18 years ago

    Mercedes I think you made the right choice. A lot of times mixers don't get cleaned properly because all the water creates a big mud puddle under the mixer so people stop too soon and don't do a good job. With drain rock you can do a great job because the water is not a factor on the ground.

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