WristyManchego
New member
- Sep 8, 2018
- 282
- 0
Hi WristyManchego,
Because I'm not a chemist and never try to play one on this forum, can you share what the letters HC stand for?
I know HF = Hydrofluoric Acid, which is a common ingredient used for chrome wheel cleaners as it dissolves the bond between brake dust and chrome so the brake dust can be rinsed off. But when I type HC or H.C. into Skynet, I don't come up with a common chemical I recognize.
Now HCL stands for Hydrochloric Acid, but that's not the same thing as HC.
If you can, clarify so everyone is on the same page as far as chemicals being talked about.
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You’re on the money mike... HC was easier to type than HCl.
In dilution both are very usable substances but I didn’t want people it think it was fine to source HF, slosh it on a rag and wipe it on.
You’d be a whisker away from a heart attack.
I’m also interested in the specific properties that the fluorine has over chlorine for cleaning uncoated aluminium. If Aaryn was recommended it by the supplier, it could simply be the type of acid they produced/used or fluorine has a property specific to the use case.
HF is excellent at etching glass but so is HCl. I know which I’d rather risk using.