by straightpick » 24 Nov 2008 20:04
The way I clean up locks, levers safe tumblers. etc. is to soak the parts in lacquer thinner, which will remove all grease and oil and not leave a residue on the parts. They don't have to soak long, about 10 minutes, then use a small paint brush to remove any heavy accumulations. Don't recommend using it in the house; it has quite a smell and is very flammable. Also dries your hands out by removing the oils from your skin - use latex gloves.
The best way to clean small parts is to buy a small kitchen strainer, put the parts in that and set it in the lacquer thinner. That way you don't have to fish for parts in the bottom of the liquid. You also don't need much thinner, a little goes a long way. If you want to be frugal, after you are finished cleaning things, pour the used thinner in another glass bottle with a top. The grease and grime will settle to the bottom and you can reuse the liquid over until it won't dissolve any more grease.
After the parts have dries, you can lubricate them with any type spray that has teflon in it - PC Blaster, Triflow, Superlube, LockSaver, etc.