Cleaning Funnels

I don’t like to waste brake cleaner if I don’t have to, so unless it’s really dirty, I wipe them out with a semi-clean microfiber shoved through with a screwdriver. I have one that I use exclusively for waste oil that never gets cleaned.
 
I have got to stop reading post's early in the mornings. I saw the header "cleaning funnels" and the first thing I thought was what the heck is a funnel for cleaning 🤣. I get it now, cleaning a funnel.
 
I have got to stop reading post's early in the mornings. I saw the header "cleaning funnels" and the first thing I thought was what the heck is a funnel for cleaning 🤣. I get it now, cleaning a funnel.
C'mon man, we ain't using present participle adjectives. We're talking progressive verb tense.

My brain does struggle with this, too. Do they mean adjective or verb...
 
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C'mon man, we ain't using present participle adjectives. We're talking progressive verb tense.

My brain does struggle with this, too. Do they mean adjective or verb...
The older I get the slower I get. Maybe I just more sleep and less forum time.
 
All kinds of different ways to clean a funnel. The fastest and most convenient way I suppose would be brake cleaner and compressed air.

That's if you have compressed air available and can afford the price of brake cleaner at over $6 a can just for cleaning funnels.

What other ways are there to clean a funnel?
Isopropyl Alcohol
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Every funnel gets wiped down with a blue shop towel after use and stored in a plastic bag. (Each funnel has its own bag.) Then they’re stored in a cabinet until needed. When I take one out to use it, it’s still clean.
I also have a dedicated waste fluid funnel that never gets used for new fluids.
 
Put some gas down the oil funnel into a mower.
If I don't need to put gas in anything then I put a paper towel in a grocery bag and tie a sheep knot in it to keep the dust off it.
It can get rather dusty here.
 
All kinds of different ways to clean a funnel. The fastest and most convenient way I suppose would be brake cleaner and compressed air.

That's if you have compressed air available and can afford the price of brake cleaner at over $6 a can just for cleaning funnels.

What other ways are there to clean a funnel?
Quick shot of brake clean, then hand wash with hot water and Dawn dish soap in the laundry sink. Air dry, then they go back in their dedicated bin. I must have 15 funnels in that bin, but I usually only use one of my three or four favourites.
 
A paper towel is going to leave all kinds of lint fibers behind. How can you stand that?

A residual amount of cellulose fiber is unlikely to be a problem in any equipment I own even if it is left, IMHO.
I doubt that those stray cellulose fibers are significantly different than any stray cellulose fibers that come from the filter element itself or fiber board end caps. Can't see a problem here.
 
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