Parts-Washer Detergent Selection for Machine Shops
Aqueous parts washers have largely replaced solvent tanks in many machine shops, but switching to a water-based detergent means the chemistry now has to be matched to your soils, your metals, and your specific washer. The right detergent runs clean and long; the wrong one foams, flash-rusts parts, or loses effectiveness fast. This guide frames the selection decisions before you request a quote.
Start with the soil. Straight cutting oils, water-soluble coolants, lapping compounds, carbon, and shop grime respond to different alkalinity levels and surfactant packages. A detergent tuned for heavy machining oils may be overkill — and harder on soft metals — for light maintenance cleaning. Knowing your dominant soil narrows the field faster than any spec sheet.
Metallurgy is the second constraint. Aluminum, brass, and other soft or "yellow" metals can react to high-alkaline detergents, so shops running mixed metals often choose products formulated and labeled for multi-metal or aluminum-safe use, and confirm compatibility on the Technical Data Sheet. As always, verify suitability against the product SDS/TDS for your specific alloys rather than assuming a general-purpose detergent is safe on everything.
Equipment type sets the foam and concentration requirements. Spray cabinet and conveyor washers need low-foaming chemistry to avoid pump cavitation and overflow, while immersion and ultrasonic tanks tolerate or even benefit from different formulations. Match the detergent class to your washer’s mechanical action before comparing brands.
Bath life and maintenance affect real cost more than purchase price. A detergent that holds its cleaning strength, tolerates oil loading, and resists going septic between shifts reduces dump-and-recharge frequency, water use, and disposal volume. A detergent with strong oil-rejection or oil-splitting behavior can also let you skim free oil off the bath surface, extending the working life of the solution between changes. Ask about expected bath life at your soil load, and plan a maintenance routine (skimming, top-off, testing) rather than running to failure.
On ICD, the parts washers category lists aqueous detergents with packaging ladders and minimum order quantities by packaging type, and the manufacturing industry and pages outline the typical program and related products for shops. SDS files are hosted on ICD so handling and dilution documentation stays with the product.
