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FrankWest 05-23-2015 06:14 AM

Chrome polish
 

What chrome polish do you recommend?

Scott H in Wheaton 05-23-2015 06:42 AM

Re: Chrome polish
 

Flitz

Granny 05-23-2015 07:17 AM

Re: Chrome polish
 

The Original PURPLE METAL POLISH

SofaKing 05-23-2015 07:52 AM

Re: Chrome polish
 

Quote:

Originally Posted by FrankWest (Post 1090589)
What chrome polish do you recommend?

Whats wrong with it, rust, blued, scratched? If it is in good condition wiping it off with a soft towel should be sufficient, maybe a little glaze or wax for a little extra lustre.

KiWinUS 05-23-2015 07:52 AM

Re: Chrome polish
 

Autosol its German used it for 40+ years

FrankWest 05-23-2015 11:05 AM

Re: Chrome polish
 

Quote:

Originally Posted by SofaKing (Post 1090640)
Whats wrong with it, rust, blued, scratched? If it is in good condition wiping it off with a soft towel should be sufficient, maybe a little glaze or wax for a little extra lustre.

It is in great shape, you recommend just cleaning with soap and water, right? Because any kind of clean may actually disturb the surface finish?

zedbyers 05-23-2015 11:32 AM

Re: Chrome polish
 

0000 Steel Wool

40cpe 05-23-2015 12:27 PM

Re: Chrome polish
 

Quote:

Originally Posted by zedbyers (Post 1090724)
0000 Steel Wool

years ago we would use Brillo pads to remove rust tint and stains from chrome. It is basically steel wool impregnated with soap which helps lubricate the scrubbing. I don't know if that is acceptable with today's chrome or not.

DavidG 05-23-2015 12:59 PM

Re: Chrome polish
 

Steel wool will make fine scratches on chrome, but it's good for heavily rusted finishes. For lightly rusted or tarnished finishes another German product is Wenol. Not inexpensive, but a little goes a long way and it will not leave scratches on the finish. Whatever you use, the main input is elbow grease.

ford38v8 05-23-2015 01:07 PM

Re: Chrome polish
 

I agree on all points with DavidG. ...And Wenol also gives amazing results on stainless and rustless steel.

Mart 05-23-2015 01:37 PM

Re: Chrome polish
 

I recently got my t-bird (57) out on the road after many years in not great storage. Most of the chrome (bumpers etc) was rechromed about 25 years ago. It looked really poor. I used coca cola and aluminium foil followed with some wax polish and it came up really great.

I recommend this as a way of reviving tired chrome, but I don't know if it would be the best thing to do on already nice chrome.

The results, in my case were really staggering.

A test on a small relatively hidden area can't hurt, I suppose.

Mart.

Henry Hopper 05-23-2015 01:47 PM

Re: Chrome polish
 

Brasso/ dura gilt....it seems to desolve small rust areas and polishes up great...Autosol etc is a abrasive and scratches the chrome....the cotton wadding types are the best no doubt.

Tim Ayers 05-23-2015 02:02 PM

Re: Chrome polish
 

Quote:

Originally Posted by Henry Hopper (Post 1090761)
Brasso/ dura gilt....it seems to desolve small rust areas and polishes up great...Autosol etc is a abrasive and scratches the chrome....the cotton wadding types are the best no doubt.

I've read somewhere Brass also contains very fine abrassive. Does anyone know if this is true?

ford38v8 05-23-2015 02:19 PM

Re: Chrome polish
 

Quote:

Originally Posted by Mart (Post 1090759)
I recently got my t-bird (57) out on the road after many years in not great storage. Most of the chrome (bumpers etc) was rechromed about 25 years ago. It looked really poor. I used coca cola and aluminium foil followed with some wax polish and it came up really great....Mart.

Mart, As '57 TBird bumpers are really quite chunky in comparison, I would therefore consider Coca Cola to be far too fattening for general use on Early Ford bumpers. :rolleyes:

Further, Don't you think it unusual that a Yank should have to remind a Brit about weight control? :eek:

FrankWest 05-23-2015 04:43 PM

Re: Chrome polish
 

Quote:

Originally Posted by Tim Ayers (Post 1090765)
I've read somewhere Brass also contains a very fine abrasive. Does anyone know if this is true?

yes, Brasso is abrasive...I have used it on watches and clocks, it actually abrades the outer surface, leaving a clean under surface.

SofaKing 05-23-2015 06:52 PM

Re: Chrome polish
 

Quote:

Originally Posted by FrankWest (Post 1090717)
It is in great shape, you recommend just cleaning with soap and water, right? Because any kind of clean may actually disturb the surface finish?

Yes. All polish is at some level abrasive, thats why it works. If the chrome is in good shape just wash and dry it with something soft that won't scratch it. Ease of cleaning is one of the great benefits of chrome. At best, polishing good chrome is a waste of time and likely to leave fine scratches. If the chrome is rusty it is already compromised so do what you will or as advised here. A lot of good products have been mentioned.

38coop 05-24-2015 06:09 AM

Re: Chrome polish
 

I use the Turtle wax chrome polish.

2935ford 05-24-2015 09:08 AM

Re: Chrome polish
 

Anybody remember semichrome?

Barry-ct 05-24-2015 09:21 AM

Re: Chrome polish
 

Ford bright metal cleaner.

RalphG 05-24-2015 11:07 PM

Re: Chrome polish
 

1 Attachment(s)
Steel wool and diesel fuel. It worked wonders on the 52 Merc which had some pretty bad spots in the chrome. Surface rust disappeared. I could not improve much on the exhaust stained right rear bumper but otherwise, not bad.


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