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Construction & Heavy Equipment Parts Washing

Graymills parts washers are designed to clean large, heavily soiled components used in construction and heavy equipment maintenance and repair.

Cleaning systems for engines, transmissions, hydraulic components, and other heavy-duty mechanical parts

Graymills provides parts washer systems for construction equipment maintenance, repair, and rebuild operations. From smaller service shops to larger fleet and equipment support facilities, Graymills helps clean engines, transmissions, hydraulic components, and other heavily soiled mechanical parts used in demanding construction environments.

With manual, immersion, ultrasonic, and spray cleaning systems available—plus solvent, aqueous, biodegradable, and bioremediating cleaning chemistries—Graymills helps customers match the right cleaning process to the part, soil, and workflow. That makes selection No Confusion.

Graymills also makes it No Risk. The Graymills test lab can evaluate different cleaning methods and chemistries on your sample parts to help identify the best solution before purchase.

What types of construction equipment parts can be cleaned in a parts washer?

Construction parts washers are used to clean a wide range of heavy-equipment components, including engines, transmissions, hydraulic pumps, valve bodies, gearboxes, final drives, brake components, cylinder heads, and other service and rebuild parts. In construction-equipment maintenance, cleaning often involves removing grease, hydraulic fluid, carbon buildup, dirt, sludge, and metal shavings from parts before inspection, repair, reassembly, or return to service. Graymills systems can be matched to both smaller precision components and larger, heavier parts commonly found in construction and fleet maintenance operations.

The best parts washer depends on the size of the parts, the amount of contamination, and how the maintenance shop operates. For larger, grease-covered construction components, spray cabinet systems such as the Graymills Tempest series are often a strong choice because they provide enclosed, repeatable cleaning with heat, chemistry, and spray action. Other applications may be better served by manual, immersion, or ultrasonic cleaning. Graymills helps customers choose the right cleaning method based on the actual part and service workflow.

Hydraulic components need thorough cleaning before rebuild or reassembly because residual oil, sludge, and debris can affect performance and reliability. Depending on part size, geometry, and contamination level, construction companies may use spray cabinets, immersion systems, or ultrasonic cleaners. Parts with internal passages, threads, or tighter geometries often require a more detailed cleaning process than larger external housings. The right solution depends on the component design and the cleanliness required before the next maintenance step.

Both solvent and aqueous parts washers are used in construction and heavy-equipment maintenance facilities. Solvent systems are often used for hands-on cleaning and grease removal in service environments. Aqueous systems use water-based detergents, often with heat and agitation or spray action, and are commonly selected when shops want a more process-controlled cleaning method. The right choice depends on the type of soil being removed, the parts being cleaned, operating practices, and waste-handling or safety requirements. Graymills offers both solvent and aqueous options to match the application.

The best cleaning method for maintenance, repair, and overhaul work depends on the mix of parts, the soil load, and the turnaround requirements. Manual parts washers are often used for quick, on-demand cleaning in service areas. Immersion systems are useful for batches of smaller parts or for all-surface cleaning. Spray cabinets are a strong fit for enclosed cleaning of greasy, heavier components. Graymills helps rebuild and MRO operations choose the cleaning method that best supports workflow, cleanliness, and labor efficiency.

Yes. Construction equipment operates in harsh environments, so parts often arrive covered in grease, mud, dust, hydraulic residue, and built-up grime. Graymills spray and immersion systems are designed for demanding cleaning applications and can be equipped with features such as heating, filtration, and fluid-management options to improve cleaning performance and extend solution life. The right washer configuration depends on the type of contamination and the volume of parts being cleaned.

Ultrasonic cleaning is typically used for smaller precision parts with holes, threads, internal passages, and more complex geometries that are difficult to clean thoroughly with spray alone. In construction-equipment repair, this can include valve bodies, injectors, smaller hydraulic components, and other detailed parts where trapped debris must be removed before reassembly. Ultrasonic cleaning is especially useful when part geometry makes detailed internal cleaning important.

Yes. Graymills systems can be customized to match the application, part flow, and maintenance process. Customization can help larger fleet operators, equipment dealers, and service organizations standardize cleaning procedures and improve consistency across maintenance operations.

  • Automated loading/unloading
  • Temperature controls
  • Multi-stage wash, rinse, and dry
  • Filtration systems
  • Adjustable spray pressure

Industrial parts washers help reduce manual cleaning time, improve consistency, and remove contamination more effectively before parts are rebuilt or returned to service. Cleaner parts can improve inspection quality, support more reliable reassembly, and help reduce the risk of contamination-related failures. For fleet maintenance operations, the result is often better workflow, faster turnaround, and reduced equipment downtime.

Yes. Graymills parts washers are manufactured in the USA. Graymills offers a broad range of cleaning systems for construction and heavy-equipment maintenance, including manual, immersion, ultrasonic, and spray parts washers designed for demanding industrial service environments.

Because construction equipment operates in dirty, high-load environments, cleaning is often a critical step in both routine maintenance and major repair work.

Common applications include:

  • Engine degreasing
  • Transmission cleaning
  • Hydraulic pump and cylinder cleaning
  • Gearbox cleaning
  • Removal of job-site mud and debris
  • Cleaning parts prior to inspection or rebuild

The right parts washer depends on part size, soil level, geometry, throughput, and required cleanliness. Manual parts washers are useful for service bays and maintenance shops where technicians need direct control. Immersion parts washers are a strong option for batch cleaning and for parts that need full-surface exposure to the cleaning fluid. Ultrasonic cleaners are best for smaller precision parts, tight passages, and more intricate geometries. Spray parts washers are ideal for repeatable cleaning of heavier parts using heat, chemistry, pressure, and flow and are especially good for easier-to-remove contaminants like mud, due to both the cleaning action and the large tank for sludge containment. Graymills offers all four approaches, which helps construction and heavy-equipment customers choose the right cleaning method for the job

The right parts washer size depends on part dimensions, part weight, contamination level, production volume, required cleanliness, and available floor space. Some construction maintenance operations need compact systems for service bays or smaller rebuild areas, while others need larger equipment for heavier parts and higher throughput. Graymills offers a broad range of washer sizes and configurations to match both small-part cleaning and heavy-equipment rebuild requirements.

Yes. Parts washers are commonly used for hydraulic component rebuilds because hydraulic parts must be cleaned thoroughly before inspection, repair, and reassembly. Removing oil, sludge, particulate contamination, and residue helps protect component performance and reduce the risk of contamination-related failure. Depending on the component geometry and level of contamination, hydraulic rebuild work may use spray, immersion, or ultrasonic cleaning methods.

Yes. Graymills can evaluate sample parts using different cleaning methods and chemistries to help determine the best solution for the application. This helps reduce guesswork and gives customers more confidence that the recommended system will perform as needed in actual construction-equipment maintenance or rebuild work.

Construction-equipment parts often need to be cleaned of grease, motor oil, hydraulic fluid, carbon deposits, mud, dust, sludge, metal shavings, and other abrasive debris. Because construction machines operate in dirty, high-load environments, contamination can be heavier and more varied than in many other repair settings. The right cleaning method depends on the type of contaminant, the part material, and what the part needs to go through next, such as inspection, rebuild, coating, or reassembly.

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