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02-20-2015, 08:44 AM | #1 |
Feeling at Home
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Stem Cleaner/Polish
Anyone have a good recommendation for polishing a stem? I bought a few estate pipes and bleached them, and gave them a good scrub with a magic eraser, but they are a little gray still. I ordered some pipe stem polish and Pipes and cigars but it is back ordered. I was curious if anyone had a good home remedy I could use?
thanks guys
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02-20-2015, 10:48 AM | #3 |
Bilge Rat
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Re: Stem Cleaner/Polish
I had a new/custom stem made by the repair dept. here and they did gorgeous work! I've never tried their restoration kit, but as good as their repair service is, I'd roll the dice on them. I have no other connection with them.
http://www.walkerbriarworks.com/
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"Man's mind is his basic tool of survival. Life is given to him, survival is not." -John Galt |
02-20-2015, 02:38 PM | #4 |
Feeling at Home
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Re: Stem Cleaner/Polish
thanks for the info guys. I actually picked up a dremel kit at lunch today, and some jewelers rouge polish. Going to give this a try this weekend. I'll post up some pics if it comes out halfway decent.
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02-20-2015, 02:50 PM | #5 |
Formerly MarkinOR
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Re: Stem Cleaner/Polish
That should get you going Kevin. I use Halcyon II on the stem, shank, and bowl, which I purchase from here:
http://www.finepipes.com/accessories/halcyon-ii-wax What did you purchase from P&C for your pipe stem Kevin?
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"Don't worry, God will work out His plan for your life..." Psalm 138 8 |
01-04-2016, 02:57 PM | #7 | |
Chillin in the Aging Room
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Re: Stem Cleaner/Polish
Quote:
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01-04-2016, 08:11 PM | #8 | |
Formerly MarkinOR
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Re: Stem Cleaner/Polish
Quote:
It sounds like you may be speaking of oxidation on the stem. In that case, you can try some Mr. Clean Magic Eraser, or some OxiClean and a tooth brush on that stem (some elbow grease and time doesn't hurt either).
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"Don't worry, God will work out His plan for your life..." Psalm 138 8 |
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03-10-2015, 05:55 PM | #9 |
Wandering aimlessly
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Re: Stem Cleaner/Polish
I remember watching a video a while back and he used olive oil to preserve the stem. I don't know that it will be useful to restore or polish, but it makes sense as far as keeping it nice!
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03-12-2016, 11:29 PM | #12 |
Have My Own Room
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Re: Stem Cleaner/Polish
I just purchased the Decatur No Ox this week. It wasn't a product when I originally bought my set. Put a drop of it on a microfiber cloth and rub on your stem. Like magic in a bottle. Makes those stems shiny and black. Not sure how it works from a full on bleach bath or other method. Mine were cleaned up but still lacking something and this stuff did the trick. I highly recommend checking it out.
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03-30-2016, 07:08 PM | #14 |
I barely grok the obvious
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Re: Stem Cleaner/Polish
For me the answer is, "It depends."
If it's in the brown to green category and there's no nomenclature on the stem, or none you want to preserve, 30-minutes in straight bleach (which kinda furs up vulcanite) then rinse with water and wet sand with MicroMesh fabric 4,000 through 12,000 for a glasslike finish. If lightly oxidized then a soak in water with a tablespoon or two of OxyClean, rinnse and sand as needed. If just a bit discolored it's pretty easy to wet sand a MicroMesh sequence from 6,000 to 12,000 If nomenclature is in-situ and you want to preserve it, same as above but cover the nomenclature with a glop of Vaseline before soaking and beware sanding or oversanding inked-on details. Nothing wrong with a low speed buffer if you have one, cotton wheels and proper use of an emery, tripoli and white diamond sequence but lower speeds are important - you can overheat and mess up some vulcanite in a heartbeat. IMO.
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