How to Clean a Car Exhaust

How to Clean a Car Exhaust

From the very first automobiles, exhaust systems have been something of a showpiece. Today, manifolds, headers, pipes and tips come in many different materials and finishes. That variety makes a difference in terms of the approach, products and work required to clean them. However you go about making your pipes shine, make sure they’re dead-cold first; partly to avoid burning your fingertips off, but also to ensure that you don’t burn off the cleaning products before they’ve had a chance to do their jobs.

 

Things You’ll Need

  • Penetrating oil
  • Ratchet
  • Socket set
  • Wrench set
  • Chrome exhaust cleaning and polishing kit, or dedicated cleaner, plastic scrub brush and green kitchen scrubby pads
  • Engine degreaser
  • Metal polishing soap
  • #0000 steel wool
  • Grinder and brass wire wheel — optional
  • Dish detergent
  • Aluminum wheel cleaner
  • Material-appropriate polish
  • Microfiber towels

Inspect the surface you’re cleaning. The under-car sections of the exhaust system can be made from many materials, including mild or stainless steel, galvanized steel, aluminized steel or even titanium. The visible tips and headers can be of the same material as the rest of the exhaust, but just as often may be chrome plated, ceramic coated or cast iron, in the case of exhaust manifolds. Each of these materials requires a different approach.

Remove the tips, header or headers for complete access, as needed. Tips are generally easy enough to remove; most of the time they’re held on with bolts, clamps or simple screws. Headers and exhaust manifolds can be fairly easy to remove on front-drive cars with inline, laterally placed engines. In other cases, like longitudinally placed V-6 or V-8 engines, they can be an utter nightmare. It’s up to you to weigh the aggravation of removing the manifolds or headers with the ease of thoroughly cleaning them away from the car. If you decide to take them off, spray the bolts with some penetrating oil, let the oil sit for 10 minutes, and take the manifolds or headers off the car.

Chrome and metallic ceramic coatings are surface coatings, so you’ll need to be gentle with them. The top coating of chrome is often only a few molecules thick, so abrasives are a bad idea. For cleaning these coatings, you’re best off going down to your local motorcycle shop or Harley dealership and picking up a kit complete with cleaner and scrubby pads — and polish, if you chose to go that route.

The important thing is to buy a dedicated chrome exhaust cleaning agent — not a chrome wheel cleaner. Exhaust cleaners are formulated for high heat and won’t discolor the metal later. Follow the kit instructions, or spray the cleaner on the component liberally, let it sit for the recommended period of time, and scrub it off with a plastic-wire brush or very gently with a kitchen-type green scrubby pad. Rinse the part thoroughly with water when you’re done.

Cast iron, mild and stainless steel are much harder and more durable than coated surfaces, so you don’t need to worry about being a little rougher with them. Start by cleaning them with a good engine degreaser and brush to remove the initial layer of grime, then rinse them off. Next, apply some metal polishing soap to an #0000 steel wool pad and start scrubbing. For cast-iron manifolds and mild steel, a brass wire wheel on a grinder will work better and faster and leave a nicer finish. Wear the proper protective gear and glasses — those wheels do throw off some pretty nasty metal bristles. Use only a brass wire wheel. Steel wire is harder, will dig into the metal and can deposit tiny fragments that will rust later.

Galvanized and aluminized steel are best cleaned with dish detergent and water, or aluminum wheel cleaner. These surfaces are rather ugly by nature, and they’ll always have a thin, chalky layer on the outside. That layer protects the metal beneath, so you don’t want to polish it off. Just clean it.

Titanium reacts badly with most dedicated cleaners, so you’re best off cleaning it with only dish detergent and water.

Polish the component to make it shine. Use a dedicated stainless polish and fine wire wool on stainless. Don’t bother polishing cast iron or mild steel — they’ll both develop a coating of surface rust anyway, unless you apply a protectant exhaust coating over them. Same thing with galvanized and aluminized steel. Polish chrome and metallic powdercoat with a standard chrome polish and a microfiber towel.

Avoid using any kind of abrasive on titanium except for mild aluminum polish. It won’t likely hurt the metal, but it will change the look of that cool blue-gold heat discoloration titanium gets. Many people like polished, blued titanium; it does have a nice, dark, wet sheen to it that looks good on black or blue cars, but it doesn’t have that bright, dramatic, blue-to-gold transition of heated titanium.

Tips & Warnings

  • Be careful when using any kind of abrasive on chrome and coated surfaces. That shine may look a mile deep, but the actual chrome coating is thinner than a human hair. It’s harder than paint, but still easy to burn through with an aggressive abrasive.

One thought on “How to Clean a Car Exhaust

  1. whoah this blog is excellent i love studying
    your posts. Stay up the great work! You already know, lots
    of people are hunting around for this information, you could help them greatly.

Comments are closed.