The alternative to this is Electrolysis. For that you will need the following.
A battery charger. Preferably something without smarts (as it just needs to send power through the electrodes no matter what) and a reasonable amount of amperage. 2 amps should be fine, more is better (a 12V power supply should also work OK)
You'll also need a piece of sacrificial metal. Essentially a piece of spare steel that you wont use again, the more surface area the better.
Something to make the water more conductive. I use this stuff called Lectic Soda:
Fill a tub with water and mix in some Lectric soda. It was advised that I use around 1 cup per 30 odd litres you can use more but the water can only get so conductive.
You put the positive clip of the battery charger on the sacrificial piece of metal. You want to try submerge as much of the metal as you can without dipping the clamp in. Try get the metal as clean as possible. Put the negative clamp of the battery charger on the part you want clean (In my case, the hub). Make sure they are not touching and turn on the charger. If it is working, your amp guage should rise a little and you should see some bubbles coming off the part you want cleaned.
As it works the sacrificial metal will turn to crud:
And your tub will fill with brown crappy sediment:
Your metal will end up looking like this:
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