Muriatic Acid; This works well, but does have drawbacks. 1 It's dangerous to handle, you must wear rubber gloves while working with it. 2 It works almost too well, eating pot metal as well as rust. Since your average petcock is made of pot metal, you must fabricate some thing to seal the petcock hole with. 3 Environmental concerns. not quite as bad as it sounds, remember, they use this stuff in swimming pools, but it takes a lot of water to neutralize it, so you have to be carefull in it's disposal.
Evapo-rust; this is something I actually heard of from some members here.
works well, from what I've heard, and no one has mentioned anything about it eating petcocks, and it's environmentally friendly, but it's kind of expensive.
Electrolysis; I haven't tried this, but it sounds really cool, using water, baking soda, and electricity, couldn't be that expensive unless you don't have a battery charger, and no drawbacks I know of.
CLR; Should work, since the R is for rust, but I don't know what the drawbacks might be. I know you're not supposed to handle it bare handed, so not so safe, maybe, and it's not to be used on aluminum, making me suspicious what it'd do to pot metal. Supposedly pretty environmentally safe, according to the label.
I was reminded of an old forgotten technique the other day, though, while watching an automotive show on TV; Vinegar. That's right, regular old distilled white vinegar, that costs less than two dollars a gallon in my area, will clean rusty metal. Just pour it in full strength and let it work a few days or more, depending on how rusty the tank is. Cheap, environmentally friendly, uncomplicated. I don't think it'd even damage a petcock (someone correct me if I'm wrong about that)
Just thought I'd share.
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