Hey again fellow Pax-minded brothers and sisters!
I've been out with a back injury (good Lord man it's always something!) for almost 2 weeks now and am bored out of my mind.
So, I decided to put together something I promised a while back:
A Pax Cleaning Tutorial!
Disclaimer: This is simply the system I've developed to clean my Pax. Don't let the verbosity of my post scare you off, I'm just trying to pack in a lot of info for those who may be new to this.
This process takes about 10-15 minutes tops, and I do it once a week religiously. My Pax is like new, and I have zero problems with it.
Pre-Cleaning Tips:
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Do this with a cold Pax
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Remove the mouthpiece (step 2 below), which puts the Pax into "temperature light" mode. Allow the Pax to sit, without the mouthpiece, motionless, until the light goes off (about 3-5 minutes). This will ensure your Pax won't come on while cleaning!
1. Here's my Pax Cleaning Kit. Seems like a lot of stuff, and perhaps it is, but it's all very cheap to buy, and in quantities that last a long time. Here's the list from left to right:
- 3 paper towels
- 3 bristled pipe cleaners
- 5 Q-Tips (these have wooden sticks, regular Q-Tips are fine, not quite as sturdy)
- 1oz shot glass
- PG Lube (this is a 1oz dropper bottle full, bought a quart on Amazon for cheap, as well as the dropper bottles)
- 1 GUM dental brush (These are the medium ones)
- 1 bit of Steel Wool (I used 00 below)
- 1 bamboo skewer
- Isopropyl Alcohol (70% works just fine, 90% is fine as well)
2. Pour 1oz of alcohol into the shot glass, remove the mouthpiece, and place it in the glass to soak.
3. Let's get that grungy resiny screen out of there! Dip the end of a pipe cleaner about 1" into the shot glass, and knock off any excess onto a paper towel.
4. Remove the oven lid and set aside.
5. While holding the Pax upright, over a paper towel, push the pipe cleaner through the tube from the top, alcohol end first, taking your time...when it meets some resistance (resin), sort of pump it up and down a few times, then push it further in, same thing, until it pushes out the screen onto the paper towel. Take the screen and place it into the shot glass with the mouthpiece.
6. Continue to work the pipe cleaner back and forth for a few strokes and then push it out through the oven. You can see how much resin and crap came just from the tube:
7. Now let's clean the oven lid. Take one of your paper towels and dip a bit into the shot glass, then rub the metal surface until clean. I then take the end of a pipe cleaner, dip it in the shot glass, and clean the magnets top and bottom, as shown below:
8. You can now clean the oven with the 00 Steel Wool (stupid me forgot to take a pic of this process, but you'll see the shiny results later on!), but it's straight forward. Take a piece of the steel wool, ball it up so it fills up 1/2 the oven (left to right, not top to bottom, you want room to move it around in there!).
Dip it in the alcohol, place it in the oven, and using the bamboo skewer (pointy end), use the steel wool to scrub the sides, the corners, and the bottom "seams" (why the pointy end is important). Don't be afraid, it won't scratch the oven, and in fact, you will find that it's just like new when you're done! If you don't get it all, take a breath, do another dip in the shot glass, and do it again, you'll get the hang of it. The Bamboo skewer is important because it holds up to the somewhat-sideways pressure you will apply getting the sides of the oven, and down into the corners. The Q-Tips, even the wooden ones, didn't seem to hold up well.
**IMPORTANT** You may notice that there are little particles from the steel wool, both collected on the magnets that hold the oven lid in place, as well as a few stray strands in the oven. Damp a bit of paper towel with alcohol, and remove this leftover stuff. Use a Q-Tip to remove it from the oven if needed. Take a pipe cleaner, dab it in the shot glass, and run it through from top to bottom that one last time, and take one last wipe of the oven with a clean paper towel or Q-Tip to ensure there is no steel wool particles in the draw tube or anywhere else.
9. Now back up to the top of the Pax! Dip the GUM brush into the shot glass, remove any drips, and insert it into the area between the tube and the body of the Pax. Use up and down motions to scrub away any resin in there. Start at "noon", scrub, move to 2 oclock, scrub, move to 4 o'clock, scrub, etc. As you're doing this, fee free to re-dip the brush and clean it on a paper towel as needed, 2-3 times during this process is normal. Follow up with the same process, only use the clean end of a pipe cleaner.
Go easy on the alcohol during this process, and do NOT drip any into the temp button! If you do, use a Q-Tip and/or corner of paper towel to dab it up as best as you can.
Don't be afraid to push down relatively far while scrubbing. If you're doing it right, you will be depressing the spring in there. It is NOT necessary to remove the spring, and you can see in the pic below how deep I'm pushing into the crevice with those bristles.
If you look down in that area, you can see the shinyness in the pic below, as well as some of the residue around the opening after cleaning...use a paper towel to gently dab this up./ I also at this time take a paper towel, dab it and make SURE there are no drips, and run it around this area..the sides, and around the hole, but BE CAREFUL and do NOT get alcohol in the temp button. When I say dabbed and no drips, it's really important here to understand a little goes a long way. Just enough to take the stank out of that mouthpiece housing.
10. Let's clean the mouthpiece. Pull the mouthpiece out of the shot glass, and drain it onto a clean paper towel, wiping it dry. Double over the end of a clean pipe cleaner about 2", dip into the shot glass, and push the doubled up end up into the mouthpiece from the bottom as shown below. Ream it out back and forth, turning it, and getting it all the way up in there when reaming:
11. Take the other end of that pipe cleaner, dip it in the shot glass, and ream out the top opening, as shown below, again, twisting and getting it in a deep as you can. Take a Q-Tip and dip it in the shot glass, and use it to clean the rest of the depression of the mouthpiece area. Scrub it good, and use a dry towel or Q-Tip to dry and clean it up.
Continued...