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Audio and Video Talk
The Vintage Audio Section
Vintage Gear Maintanance
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<blockquote data-quote="Steerpike" data-source="post: 476291" data-attributes="member: 807"><p>The outer steel cover can be sanded and reprayed quite easily.</p><p></p><p>The aluminium front.... if ordinary liquid soap doesn't work, I've had very nice results with deoxidene.</p><p>But TEST the deoxidene on an invsible area first - the result depends on the exact nature of the anodising and printing. And don' leave it on too long - a minute or two is enough. Wipe it dry, don't wash it off. When & if it works safely, the results are spectacular!</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Steerpike, post: 476291, member: 807"] The outer steel cover can be sanded and reprayed quite easily. The aluminium front.... if ordinary liquid soap doesn't work, I've had very nice results with deoxidene. But TEST the deoxidene on an invsible area first - the result depends on the exact nature of the anodising and printing. And don' leave it on too long - a minute or two is enough. Wipe it dry, don't wash it off. When & if it works safely, the results are spectacular! [/QUOTE]
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Audio and Video Talk
The Vintage Audio Section
Vintage Gear Maintanance
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