Shell Ensis oil ('non-drying' rust prevention)

Model Engineering in UK - Model engineering, metal crafts in UK 

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Shell Ensis oil ('non-drying' rust prevention) Myford Matt 08-23-2006
Posted by Myford Matt on August 23, 2006, 10:42 am
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In George Thomas's book 'The Model Engineer's Workshop Manual' he is
very clear
that Ensis oil 152 or 158 (SAE20) from Shell is a wonderful
corrosion protection
product:

'All of these products are described by the manufacturers as
"non-drying" oils -
a property which I find most valuable because small
tools and parts of models
can be wiped over with the thinnest film of
oil which, even after the passage of
many years, will not oxidise and
leave the bright parts coated with a depressing
looking film of brown
varnish which is what invariably happens when ordinary oil
is used for
the purpose... No workshop should be without it.'

I phoned Shell, who were helpful, but said that the product codes were
out of
date - GHT's wonder oil is now probably DW1255 - and that I
could only buy it in
a minimum of 20 litre quantities.

So, simple question, is there a modern day equivalent (WD40 perhaps?)
which can
be bought in sensible volumes?

Cheers

Matt


--
Myford Matt
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Myford
Matt's Profile: http://www.rcgroups.com/forums/member.php?u=66196
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thread: http://www.rcgroups.com/forums/showthread.php?t=560246


Posted by Prepair Ltd on August 23, 2006, 11:51 am
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On Wed, 23 Aug 2006 09:42:00 -0500, Myford Matt

>
>In George Thomas's book 'The Model Engineer's Workshop Manual' he is
>very clear that Ensis oil 152 or 158 (SAE20) from Shell is a wonderful
>corrosion protection product:
>
>'All of these products are described by the manufacturers as
>"non-drying" oils - a property which I find most valuable because small
>tools and parts of models can be wiped over with the thinnest film of
>oil which, even after the passage of many years, will not oxidise and
>leave the bright parts coated with a depressing looking film of brown
>varnish which is what invariably happens when ordinary oil is used for
>the purpose... No workshop should be without it.'
>
>I phoned Shell, who were helpful, but said that the product codes were
>out of date - GHT's wonder oil is now probably DW1255 - and that I
>could only buy it in a minimum of 20 litre quantities.
>
>So, simple question, is there a modern day equivalent (WD40 perhaps?)
>which can be bought in sensible volumes?
>
>Cheers
>
>Matt

WD40 is too light to stay around very long, Ensis leaves a heavy film which is
really a coating, that stays for years.

If you need that kind of protection then you need Ensis or its modern
equivalent.


Peter
--
Peter A Forbes
Prepair Ltd, Luton, UK
prepair@easynet.co.uk
http://www.prepair.co.uk

Posted by Andrew Mawson on August 23, 2006, 12:04 pm
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> On Wed, 23 Aug 2006 09:42:00 -0500, Myford Matt
>
> >
> >In George Thomas's book 'The Model Engineer's Workshop Manual' he
is
> >very clear that Ensis oil 152 or 158 (SAE20) from Shell is a
wonderful
> >corrosion protection product:
> >
> >'All of these products are described by the manufacturers as
> >"non-drying" oils - a property which I find most valuable because
small
> >tools and parts of models can be wiped over with the thinnest film
of
> >oil which, even after the passage of many years, will not oxidise
and
> >leave the bright parts coated with a depressing looking film of
brown
> >varnish which is what invariably happens when ordinary oil is used
for
> >the purpose... No workshop should be without it.'
> >
> >I phoned Shell, who were helpful, but said that the product codes
were
> >out of date - GHT's wonder oil is now probably DW1255 - and that I
> >could only buy it in a minimum of 20 litre quantities.
> >
> >So, simple question, is there a modern day equivalent (WD40
perhaps?)
> >which can be bought in sensible volumes?
> >
> >Cheers
> >
> >Matt
>
> WD40 is too light to stay around very long, Ensis leaves a heavy
film which is
> really a coating, that stays for years.
>
> If you need that kind of protection then you need Ensis or its
modern
> equivalent.
>
>
> Peter
> --
> Peter A Forbes
> Prepair Ltd, Luton, UK
> prepair@easynet.co.uk
> http://www.prepair.co.uk

Shell Ensis is still available and comes in several grades. I recently
bought 20 litres of 'S' grade to coat everything prior to my aborted
house move. These are the people I got it from:

http://www.btls.co.uk/LMetal.htm

AWEM



Posted by scruffybugger on August 23, 2006, 12:11 pm
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I've used Ensis 158 for storing ploughs when not in use (you'd be
surprised how much difference it makes to the lifespan of the wearing
metal) but mine does leave a strange dark brown coating like dusty
varnish.
IF it can be bought in reasonable quantities it might be worth trying
Castrol Rustilo. I've used it on some of my tools with success. It's
funny stuff because it does almost dry over time, but form a pretty
tough non-rusting layer. I've used it on things I don't use much, like
the 4 jaw and faceplate for my big Monarch lathe. When I do need them,
a careful wipe down with parafin removes the Rustilo - which I replace
as soon as I finish...
Other than that I don't really know what else is available other than
maybe Waxoyl?
HTH, Scruff.
PS I should mention that both the Ensis & the Rustilo I have in stock
came from farm sales, so I'm not sure if they still exist as products.


Myford Matt wrote:
> In George Thomas's book 'The Model Engineer's Workshop Manual' he is
> very clear that Ensis oil 152 or 158 (SAE20) from Shell is a wonderful
> corrosion protection product:
>
> 'All of these products are described by the manufacturers as
> "non-drying" oils - a property which I find most valuable because small
> tools and parts of models can be wiped over with the thinnest film of
> oil which, even after the passage of many years, will not oxidise and
> leave the bright parts coated with a depressing looking film of brown
> varnish which is what invariably happens when ordinary oil is used for
> the purpose... No workshop should be without it.'
>
> I phoned Shell, who were helpful, but said that the product codes were
> out of date - GHT's wonder oil is now probably DW1255 - and that I
> could only buy it in a minimum of 20 litre quantities.
>
> So, simple question, is there a modern day equivalent (WD40 perhaps?)
> which can be bought in sensible volumes?
>
> Cheers
>
> Matt
>
>
> --
> Myford Matt
> ------------------------------------------------------------------------
> Myford Matt's Profile: http://www.rcgroups.com/forums/member.php?u=66196
> View this thread: http://www.rcgroups.com/forums/showthread.php?t=560246


Posted by Newshound on August 23, 2006, 4:51 pm
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http://www.vapor-tek.co.uk/html/products.htm

No personal or commercial connection, but the gaffer / MD is a chemist and
very knowledgable



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