Brass Cleaning

Vinegar has a tiny acetic acid content, 1 or 2 %. Ketchup probably has a small amount of vinegar in it.
A bit more than that. Typically around 4 to 5 % IIRC.
(Determination of acidity of vinegar was a standard chemistry practical exercise when I worked in a school.)
The label on the bottle in my pantry says 5% and the Balsamic vinegar is 6%

Yes vinegar is listed among the ingredients on the ketchup bottle.
 
Brasso have made millions selling their abrasive product. Steel wool is very mild by comparison, less than a quarter of the hardness and no sharp particles, just rounded wire.

I was being a bit lax in my post ... as I've seen people use real scouring steel wool and no amount of polishing ever brought shine back. But agreed that using fine wool is OK.

Brasso / Bluebell (fav of car painters !) has been successful for many decades and at least is a reasonably safe bet.

If you really want to see metal surface irreparably damaged : Try Amway Metal Cleaner ..... the paste is so abrasive it takes all shine of any metal in literally one wipe !! It actually tells you on the can ... but so many people ignore that ..
 
Sorry about the continuity issue:ROFLMAO:. Completely passed me by.
Still, despite the naysayers, Tom sauce is effective,
Each to their own.

Maybe its like many good products in past ... todays 'Greenies' have destroyed so many products effectiveness that they are today near useless ........... Cilit Bang Rust and Lime Cleaner is good example.
 
Look, if you're not going to take my valuable input seriously - I won't bother posting again.


Licked it off.

;)
The Perishers, in the Daily Mirror would have saved it up & made an inch thick tomato ketchup sarnie. Licking it off without using bread, toast, bacon or fried bread is just gross. No table manners :rolleyes:
No wonder I have mucky brass bits if I am expected to go round licking it. ?
 
I bought some Brass lamps from this Fora - they came up beautiful after an hour or so using a medium then soft polishing pad fitted to a bench grinder.
 
A bit more than that. Typically around 4 to 5 % IIRC.
(Determination of acidity of vinegar was a standard chemistry practical exercise when I worked in a school.)
The label on the bottle in my pantry says 5% and the Balsamic vinegar is 6%

Yes vinegar is listed among the ingredients on the ketchup bottle.
My memory is not what it was?
 
Acetic acid is vinegar - so similar to the the ketchup option but faster
Many of the Polish and other Eastern European grocery shops around Dublin sell a cleaning vinegar which is considerably more concentrated than the culinary variety and may very well be more effective in cleaning brass. I will experiment and report when I get home.
 
Citric acid. Faster removal, less damamge to the underlying metal than other suggestions (I have tested many products side-by-side, measuring both descaling and metal loass). Google it. About 3-5%, hot is preferred. Spotless Stainless is jelled citric acid.
 
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