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I do hope by dish soap you guys are not referring to liquid soap that we clean the dishes with as this contains salt and unless rinsed thoroughly with fresh water will start corrosion.
When cleaning or at the start of restoration it is always best to start very gently with weak solutions slowly increasing as required or else permanent damage may occur
Great relic and good luck with the cleaning. Looking forward to seeing your results.
Regards, Mark.
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07-29-2016 06:12 PM
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by
slados28
If it ever comes to cleaning with acid I would use citric before messing with the very harsh and dangerous oxalic --- nice relic btw, good luck!
Absolutely, oxalic is very dangerous, I read up that lemon acid aka citric acid does about the same and not harmful, I just going to go with Glenn and Dan advice and just clean it up just alittle to bring out alittle more detail without taking away the patina
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by
chevyfan2k9
just clean it up just alittle to bring out alittle more detail without taking away the patina
Always important, clean it too much and it's ultimately ruined as a relic... the patina really counts --- a fine balance.
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Glenn what type of dish soap did you use?, just want to make sure I get the right stuff
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Just use hand soap then if you are worried but the salts that have already done the corrosion are still present and active so a good wash & scrub will not make the situation worse. Then keep it in a dry place.
Dan
" I'm putting off procrastination until next week "
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Ok Dan, maybe I should just leave it as is, rust is not getting any worse and I have it in a ac climate but would love to see what's under all that crud and surface rust
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Funny how people panic at the mention of oxalic acid, as long as one wears rubber gloves in a ventilated space there is nothing to worry about.
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hey guys what about cleaning with ordinary vinegar (kitchen used type)
i saw some amazing results with it
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