Experimenting. Always test first.
Previously posted from @BGinGA
Previously posted from @BGinGA
Never cared much for the brass flake look, so tarnished (and less noticeable) is perfectly fine with me. But if so inclined, try one or more of the following (on a test chip you care nothing about first, please....):
- Tiny dab of Brasso* on a cloth, rub it around the rolling edge. Rinse or wipe with water-wet cloth afterwards.
- Buff using a cloth polishing wheel and Dremel tool at slow speed (surface-mounted, not hand-held).
* available at The Home Depot
DISCLAIMER: I have no idea what the ingredients may do to ASM/CPC chips. The formulas for Brasso differ from country to country, too -- so something that works in the US may be lethal for chips when purchased elsewhere:
Just a hunch, but the US version is probably the safest of those three for chips. I wouldn't use hydrocarbons on ASM chip materials, even if just a test.
Dremel rotary tool (advise using a mounted -not hand-held- variable-speed model at low speed):
512E EZ Lock Finishing Abrasive Buffs 320 Grit (ideal for removing tarnish from brass)
http://www.dremel.com/en-us/Accessories/Pages/ProductDetail.aspx?pid=512E
422 Felt Polishing Cone (use with 421 Polishing Compound)
http://www.dremel.com/en-us/Accessories/Pages/ProductDetail.aspx?pid=422
421 Polishing Compound (removes dull oxidized film and polishes metals)
http://www.dremel.com/en-us/Accessories/Pages/ProductDetail.aspx?pid=421
Off-topic, but I had no idea that Dremel is now selling a 3D model printer -- $999 at The Home Depot or Amazon.com:
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