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Ihr Warenkorb ist leer'Make your Copper, Brass, Silver and Bronze Shine in minutes., A REVOLUTIONARY Polishing Cloth that Replaces and Out performs a full Shelf of liquid, Paste and powder Cleaners., Even REMOVES Heel and Scuff Marks from Floors., A miracle Cloth Cleans, POLISHES AND WAXES EVERYTHING IN THE HOUSE OR Shop., 9 "x 12 New Bigger Size.
Liby
Bewertet in Australien am 10. Mai 2025
It really works as advertised. Removes all stubborn tarnish.
Monte E Ashcraft
Bewertet in den USA am6. April 2025
Works great on musical instruments, a must have.
Odys
Bewertet in den USA am20. Oktober 2024
I bought this after watching a YouTube video showing this cloth as the final step in cleaning your fretboard. It’s amazing how much gunk it took off even after a good cleaning. Cutting it into little strips means it will last forever. The strong coconut smell comes through the packaging. It doesn’t bother me, but it made my wife gag.
D. W.
Bewertet in den USA am29. Juli 2023
An antique dealer on YouTube suggested using this product to remove tarnish from silver overlay on glass. These items can be very easily damaged by other methods used to clean silver because of how the silver is bonded to the glass. I've actually bought multiple pieces with undisclosed damaged caused by attempts to clean the items. These pieces also often develop dark, significant tarnish as they lose their anti-tarnish layers.This product works like a dream! Very little pressure is needed to remove heavy, black oxidation, and the product continues to work even once it appears to be stained with oxidation.The only time I'll use a traditional polishing/cleaning cloth rather than this product is if the piece contains stones or other components that could be stained by the oil and tarnish residue this leaves on your piece as you remove the tarnish. That residue can easily be removed with soap and water, but I'm overly cautious with pearls, opals, and wood items.
Pachyderm
Bewertet in den USA am19. März 2023
I use these to polish my raw brass tubas. I usually use this expensive German brass polish but it reeks of ammonia, and you have to chemically degrease after using it or you will get black hands when you play, and you can ruin clothing with the black, oxidized brass. These smell weird, but pretty nice. You can still get stuff on your clothes, but the bulk of the residue buffs off easily. I work pretty hard with the cloth to remove the patin and water spots, but I keep it to about a square foot at a time or it dries/hardens and you have to wipe the surface down again to get that residue off. Once I have cleaned up the finish nicely I then wipe it clean and buff it as best I can with an old cotton diaper or teeshirt. It is not as good as the German polish, but I can easily do this on stage at rehearsals during tacets. It does not create an overwhelming stink like a polish. and if I stick to small patches at one time and buff them very thoroughly I get nothing on my clothes. I have found that this schmutz comes off my hands with Wet-Ones antibacterial wipes. (The stupid things one learns during a global pandemic…) So I keep a pack of them, one of these cloths in a ziplock baggie, and a buffing teeshirt fragment in my gig bag. Only buffing with tripoli and red rouge compounds with a floor-mounted buffer will make the horn look new, and the German polish is almost that good. This is not. However, it is an easy way to keep a raw brass tuba looking nice and kill time during tacets. It is cheap. I like it. I recommend it. And I will purchase more of these as I need them. Great product!
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