The stuff you describe is exactly what electro does. No sandblasting, wire brushing, lye, elbow grease, sos pads, sandpaper, scraping, no whatever. Electro does leave on a black film that easily washes off with dawn dish soap and some water, if you want to light wire brush it to make it look like it was made yesterday, you can do that too, but if you just want to clean it, then electro it and wash the film off and you should be good to go. Thats my opinion and I'm sticking to it. And I've cleaned a lot of cast iron.
HOWEVER, if you do not want to cheat yourself out of all the fun then I would not recommend electro at all.
Thanks, but I've never been above a little harmless cheating. ;)
So you think the electro will zap the scale as well? That would be truly sweet.
Lee:
The grill is (gasp!) propane. Having little kids and a full time job mandates simple grilling techniques for the week. I pull out the charcoal, hickory and the smoker on the weekends when things aren't too hectic.
I'm guessing the scale problem is a combination of high heat (trying to get the grates hot for steaks and such) and less than dutiful care on my part. I've been using PAM instead of Crisco, and after some searching around the web it appears that may not be the best idea.
I too am sure there is a lot of life left in them. If there wasn't (and I weren't so cheap) I'd just pop down to Home Despot and pick up a new set. But since I have everything to do electro already (except the washing soda) its a near zero cost to try.
If the stink isn't too bad I may get a couple seasoning passes on it in the oven to get things rolling, but if its too bothersome to the womenfolk I'm sure I'll be banished outside.
OK, so since electro sounds plausible can I get a little feedback on my proposed setup?
Rubbermaid bucket (7 gallon I think, maybe slightly bigger)
Several sheets of steel (not stainless or galvanized, it already has a bit of surface rust)
Steel wire used to tie rebar together at cross points (left over from building a shed foundation)
Lambda lab grade rack mount power supply, adjustable 0-60V 0-20A
Tap water and washing soda
Three of the steel sheets is almost exactly the same area as one grate, which seems pretty ideal.
I would put the steel sheets in the bottom, all tied together with the steel wire which is then brought out for the anode connection.
I would suspend the grate above the sheets with more steel wire, providing a cathode connection out of the water.
How does that sound?