again, to back up a little, for the waxed once-grease on that part, a 
vinegar soak is the best way to remove it.  But also again, for realistic 
light polishing, the "miracle" lemon oil polishing cloths are excellent - I 
have satin finish 40-year-old parts (anodizing was really thin then) that 
still have their satin finish after a dozen years of light polishing with 
these cloths.  

On Saturday, December 29, 2012 10:23:58 AM UTC-6, Garth wrote:
>
> They won't look at good as new again .  As these are anodized . there 
> isn't really any "polishing" you can do, because the surface of anodized 
> aluminum is satin finish via chemical process .. like a skin so to speak.  
> So if you try to polish it like unanodized aluminum , you'll remove the 
> satin finish. The key is to just remove what's attached to the satin 
> finish, without removing the satin finish !  That takes finesse and trial 
> as you go.  
>
>>
>> <https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/-SP_SLhnDYKQ/UN5v5sESHOI/AAAAAAAAA8A/96VsXUL-IqI/s1600/IMG_4551.jpg>
>>
>

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