Technical advice needed

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vintage1963

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Jun 26, 2015
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364
Location
Ohio
Hi friends...

I recently acquired this percolator from Ebay. As you can see it is in good shape. However, I am puzzled by something. The stem inside the percolator does not come out. It seems to be immovable. Could this be caused by corrosion, or could this percolator have been made with a stem that is not meant to be removed? I have never encountered this before. None of the other percolators I have are like this, no matter how old they are.

Thoughts?

vintage1963-2019103007242800309_1.jpg

vintage1963-2019103007242800309_2.jpg
 
I think you hit the nail on the head, Ed.  The well may be corroded and has fused the stem to it.  Have you tried pouring very hot water into it or letting the perk heat up with water then removing the stem?  

 

That's a nice perk, BTW!  One I've been on the prowl for as well... LOL
 
Mirro-Matic and West Bend used to recommend using Cream of Tartar to clean aluminum percolators. Try filling the pot to the max fill and add 2 tbls.of Cream of Tartar and run it thru a brew cycle, then unplug the pot and let the solution of water and Cream of Tartar sit in the pot until it has cooled off, or a few hours. Then GENTLY try to move the stem from side to side in all four directions, just a little bit and see if that doesn’t loosen it up. I’m pretty sure that this stem wasn’t meant to be permanently fixed to the heating well. If this doesn’t work, try to GENTLY pry it by placing a long, thin bladed knife point between the base of the stem and the heating well. I think with patience and perseverance you will finally be able to free the stem base from the heating well.

BTW, Cream of Tartar is an acid that is derived from the production of wine, It is best to cleaning aluminum percolators because it won’t blacken the aluminum like dishwasher detergent will.

Good luck and HTH.
Eddie
 
Stupid question...

 

<span style="font-family: 'book antiqua', palatino; font-size: 14pt;">I know this might be a dumb question but did you try turning it?  I've seen some over the years that screw in and out.</span>
 

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