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Nickel kisses off of stainless?
I was shooting nickel plated brass(gold dots), and have some nickel marks in my matte stainless slide[emoji26] is there something that will take these off? All of my brass kiss removal methods are not working. Thanks!http://uploads.tapatalk-cdn.com/2016...6ed5a28c99.jpg
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never had this problem before but if it were me i'd try 0000 steel wool and see if that did anything.
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Nickel kisses off of stainless?
Thanks! I'm nervous about making the sandblast finish shinny though. I was hoping there was some chemical or something that would lift it off.
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Try Flitz metal polish and small cotton ball < Good Luck. I don't use nickel plated brass in auto pistols are rifles for that reason,
Clyde |
Here are the Scotchbrite pad ratings. You might try a white (1200-1500 grit) or a blue (1000) grit. Very carefully so as not to damage the sandblasting.
3M Scotch Brite Nylon Pads: 7445 - White pad, called Light Duty Cleansing - (1000) 1200-1500 grit 7448 - Light Grey, called Ultra Fine Hand - (600-800) 800 grit. 6448 - Green (?), called Light Duty Hand Pad - (600) 600 grit 7447 - Maroon pad, called General Purpose Hand - (320-400) 320 grit 6444 - Brown pad, called Extra Duty Hand - (280-320) 240 grit 7446 - Dark Grey pad, called Blending Pad (180-220) 150 grit 7440 - Tan pad, called Heavy Duty Hand Pad - (120-150) 60(?) Green Scotch Brite is available EVERYWHERE. It's 600 grit. Blue Scotch-Brite is considered to be about 1000 grit. (The value inside the parentheses is directly from 3M.) 3M Chart BUT.... If it was my gun, I would start even simpler. Consider trying a Mr. Clean white "Magic Eraser" and some plain water. I'll bet you have one under the kitchen sink already. It is so gentle, that I don't think it would do any damage to the finish. All said, I don't know the finish, so whatever you choose to do, do cautiously. |
Try Kleenbore Gun Care Lead Away Gun Cloth or equivalent (Birchwood Casey, Midway brand, etc). Works great on cleaning stains on my stainless revolver cylinders.
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Nickle is a tough one to remove. Strong ammonia bore solvent - something like Butch's Bore Shine or Sweet's 7.62 - might loosen it up. Any mechanical method of removal will likely put a shine on the finish.
http://www.cotep.org/forum/picture.p...pictureid=1046 |
Thanks everyone! I'll do some cautious experimenting.
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0000 steel wool wrapped around a toothpick and worked over the spots would probably do it and not polish the rest of the surrounding area.
Crocus cloth (jewelers rouge) might work too. |
Thanks! I'll give it a shot!
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