- Joined
- Jan 31, 2010
- Messages
- 3,099
FWIW - and to endorse post #13 - I recently used toothpaste to polish some brass - worked as well as any brass polish I have ever used! Never tried it but no reason it wouldn't do the same with AL!
They've salted the roads over here too. Add to that, I live in a place where my only road out floods with the tides, sea water twice a day for half the month. So, even in the summer I have to be on top of rust prevention. ACF50 and WD40 have their own cupboard in my garage.Flitz or Blue Magic paste from tubes then Shine Seal ( formerly Zoop Seal ) . Shine seal is a chemical sealant that you simply wipe on for dull finish ( rough castings ) and wipe on / polish out with the included polish for high finish work . Expensive but it works - I live at the seashore in the the Northeast, the corrosion capital of the universe .
Wonder how many centuries it would take to wear through an alloy case with Autosol.Years ago a mate of mine had a kwak h1 show bike
He'd never use autolsol he said it was too abrasive on aluminium
He used to use T cut as far as I can remember
He was a bit anal with the bike he used to take the engine out to clean it!
I remember him flying over to denco tuning with the barrels for porting!
It wasn't the wear he was worried about it was the lack of shineWonder how many centuries it would take to wear through an alloy case with Autosol.
66.47€ on Amazon France! Flitz over 50€ plus a lot for shipping......Don Pender recommends “california custom purple metal polish” for aluminum , I used it on wheels he built for me and is better than auto sol … this is correct name …..
Toothpaste seems a lot more affordable than other products posted. I'm willing to try. Colgate ? Crest ?toothpaste ....
Back in the mid '60s when toothpastes had a lot more abrasives in them, we used to use toothpaste to run in bevel gears on slot cars. Run the gears for 10-15 minutes with toothpaste, clean them up, apply some lubricant and they were nearly silent. Freed up a lot of parasitic power loss from friction.Toothpaste seems a lot more affordable than other products posted. I'm willing to try. Colgate ? Crest ?
I remember slot car pick-ups . We were always cleaning them until the rail grooves cut through the copper . Likely improved pick-ups 50 years later.Back in the mid '60s when toothpastes had a lot more abrasives in them, we used to use toothpaste to run in bevel gears on slot cars. Run the gears for 10-15 minutes with toothpaste, clean them up, apply some lubricant and they were nearly silent. Freed up a lot of parasitic power loss from friction.
Whatever is to hand , supermarket own brand willbe cheapest andprobaaby have most abraisive .Another old favourite for cleaning metal was HP sauce..Toothpaste seems a lot more affordable than other products posted. I'm willing to try. Colgate ? Crest ?