| FSU Former Soviet Union RF This forum is for the Former Soviet Union rangefinder cameras, especially the many and various Fed, Zorki, and Kiev. |
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Aluminum cleaning |
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05-22-2012
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#1
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Registered User
tho60 is offline
Join Date: Jul 2010
Posts: 78
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Aluminum cleaning
Hello,
I have just bought an LTM Jupiter-9. Optics seem to be good, but lens barrel is heavily damaged by corrosion. How to clean the aluminum barrel without harming the engraved (and then painted) insriptions?
There are special aluminum cleaners, but I cannot afford them- for a single cleaning operation why to buy a complete can? Some people recommend Trisodium phosphate. Has anyone tried it?
Tho60
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05-22-2012
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#2
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Registered User
btgc is offline
Join Date: Jul 2007
Posts: 3,758
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You are just thinking it will be single lens, single cleaning 
Sorry, can't help with your actual issue....
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05-22-2012
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#3
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Registered User
Steve M. is offline
Join Date: Jun 2009
Posts: 1,988
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Never tried that. Found this though
http://www.knowledgegalaxy.net/how_t..._aluminum.html
My experience w/ aluminum is to use a very fine sandpaper to remove stuff, then use a wore out Brillo pad, then polish w/ polishing compound. It will look shiny like chrome after that. It's all tedious work, especially if you have the lens assembled.
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05-22-2012
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#4
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Registered User
MartinP is offline
Join Date: Jul 2006
Location: Netherlands
Posts: 2,000
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A good quality metal-polish would be ok. The FSU lenses were lacquered with something-or-other, but it sounds as though that has long disappeared on your lens so polishing the grey from the aluminium is what you want to do? Smoothing out any cavities and deep corrosion would be a bigger sort of problem that would need more than metal-polish.
I have used a small tube of Autosol which works fine, but there are lots of different brands available depending largely on where you live. If you have a Dremel or similar, then a small buffing wheel might be handy too.
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05-22-2012
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#5
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Registered User
BobYIL is offline
Join Date: Sep 2009
Posts: 1,321
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Buy a small can Nevr Dull for about 5 dollars, polish everything alu, brass, bronze, chrome, etc. without needing to worry about whether something will leak into your lens or camera. Using it since decades on cameras, motorcycles and almost all metal articles.
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05-22-2012
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#6
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packin' light
buzzardkid is offline
Join Date: Jun 2007
Location: Assen, The Netherlands
Age: 42
Posts: 6,862
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In the past I cleaned the yellow off my Jupiter-9 using alcohol. The yellow actually is a sort of laquer that the factory applied to the aluminium to keep it from going grey but in time it turns yellow. A soft cloth, alcohol and a lot of rubbing cleaned it off.
Anything else in the corrision department is not remedied with this though.
__________________
Cheers, Johan
Leica II (1932), Elmars 50 & 135, Heliar 50: the nickel kit
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Ricoh GXR Monochrom
Visit johanniels.com!
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05-22-2012
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#7
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Registered User
fanshaw is offline
Join Date: Mar 2007
Posts: 334
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If it is just tarnished then rubbing with a microfibre cloth will remove it leaving a bright finish and no residue.
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05-23-2012
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#8
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Registered User
tho60 is offline
Join Date: Jul 2010
Posts: 78
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Quote:
Originally Posted by BobYIL
Buy a small can Nevr Dull for about 5 dollars, polish everything alu, brass, bronze, chrome, etc. without needing to worry about whether something will leak into your lens or camera. Using it since decades on cameras, motorcycles and almost all metal articles.
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Thank you for your advice. Does not Nevr Dull remove the inscriptions?  They are engraved, and then filled with black paint.
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05-23-2012
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#9
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Registered User
tho60 is offline
Join Date: Jul 2010
Posts: 78
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Steve M.
Never tried that. Found this though
http://www.knowledgegalaxy.net/how_t..._aluminum.html
My experience w/ aluminum is to use a very fine sandpaper to remove stuff, then use a wore out Brillo pad, then polish w/ polishing compound. It will look shiny like chrome after that. It's all tedious work, especially if you have the lens assembled.
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Yes, I could do it, but IMHO the sandpaper will damage the inscriptions. 
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05-23-2012
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#10
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Registered User
BobYIL is offline
Join Date: Sep 2009
Posts: 1,321
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Quote:
Originally Posted by tho60
Thank you for your advice. Does not Nevr Dull remove the inscriptions?  They are engraved, and then filled with black paint.
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No.. it's soft like cotton, smelling kerosene. Since the inscriptions are imprinted or milled below the surface it won't affect. While rubbing a piece of Nevr Dull you'll notice how it works only "over" the surface.
(For renewing any missing inscriptions use acrylic type paints sold in tiny bottles for DIY modeling..)
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05-24-2012
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#11
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Registered User
wolves3012 is offline
Join Date: Sep 2006
Location: Wolverhampton, UK
Age: 56
Posts: 2,406
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Quote:
Originally Posted by tho60
Hello,
I have just bought an LTM Jupiter-9. Optics seem to be good, but lens barrel is heavily damaged by corrosion. How to clean the aluminum barrel without harming the engraved (and then painted) insriptions?
There are special aluminum cleaners, but I cannot afford them- for a single cleaning operation why to buy a complete can? Some people recommend Trisodium phosphate. Has anyone tried it?
Tho60
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Trisodium phosphate is very alkaline and aluminium will dissolve in alkalis (and acids) so I'd suggest that would be a bad course of action. Use an aluminium (metal) polish, there are many to choose from. Yes, it may remove some of the markings if you're unlucky but you can get paint pencils to re-fill them.
__________________
Zorki: 1e (x2), 2C, 3M, 4, 4K, 5, 6
FED: NKVD, 1g, 2e, 3a, 3b, 4L (x2), 5B, 5C
Kiev 4, 4A
Leica IIIC
Yashica Minister III
Zenith C, Zenit C, Zenit E
Minolta XG M, Z1
Nikon P50
"The way to see by faith is to shut the eye of reason."- Benjamin Franklin
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Cleaning aluminum |
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05-25-2012
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#12
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Bodger Extraordinaire
Dez is offline
Join Date: May 2009
Location: Mississauga, Ontario
Posts: 576
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Cleaning aluminum
If you use a normal alloy polish such as you'd use for the cases of a motorcycle engine, something like Solvol Autosol, it will clean the aluminum, but you will be left with a too-shiny surface that doesn't look right, and makes the engravings hard to see.
I think I have just the stuff.
For significant corrosion, use something like very fine emery paper, maybe 2000 grit, but after you have done your thing with the sandpaper, rub the surface down with the type of cleaner used for ceramic stovetops- I use something called Ceramibryte. This is a very mild abrasive that will leave a slightly matte finish, and not leave you with the directional scratches that even the finest of sandpaper creates. But DO make sure you wipe it all off when you are done. It is an abrasive, and not something you want to get into moving parts.
The same stuff does wonders for satin chrome surfaces that have become a bit porous, abraded or mottled. I have used it to good effect on many an old Russian clunker.
Cheers,
Dez
Last edited by Dez : 05-25-2012 at 13:43.
Reason: Typo
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Anodized |
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05-25-2012
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#14
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Registered User
Monochrom is offline
Join Date: May 2012
Posts: 285
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Anodized
Hi, many aluminium pbjects have a finishing called anodized...this is a very resistant coating made of aluminium crontrolled oxide.
A current is applyied under some circumstances and this layer of "al oxide" leaves the raw surface of aluminium with a thin coating that protects it and leaves also a semishining look.
the problem with this is that many times the process has not been done properly and it may corrode...or siply wores out, when this happens the layer goes away and you cannot restore it.
You may clean the dust, grease and other stuff left in the corroded surface, but if the anodized i gone, there´s not much you can do.
Bye!
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picture |
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05-26-2012
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#15
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Registered User
tho60 is offline
Join Date: Jul 2010
Posts: 78
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picture
Thanks for your advices. I am trying to attach a picture, albeit system noticed that my quota had exceeded.
You are very kind, but you recommend chemicals which are available easily in the U.S., although hard to find in Hungary. E.g. Nevr Dull costs 5 dollars in the U.S, in Hungary it costs 10 dollars or more. I paid some 50 dollars for the lens (incl. shipping), so buying a whole can is not worth the money.
I admit that 50 dollars were bargain price for that lens, yet I would not invest in expensive chemicals which after doing the job I will not able to use.
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05-26-2012
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#16
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Registered User
Greyscale is offline
Join Date: Jul 2010
Location: Fort Dodge Iowa
Age: 52
Posts: 2,137
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Have you tried a bit of toothpaste on a soft cloth?
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05-26-2012
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#17
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Registered User
wolves3012 is offline
Join Date: Sep 2006
Location: Wolverhampton, UK
Age: 56
Posts: 2,406
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Based on that picture - I'd just live with it.
__________________
Zorki: 1e (x2), 2C, 3M, 4, 4K, 5, 6
FED: NKVD, 1g, 2e, 3a, 3b, 4L (x2), 5B, 5C
Kiev 4, 4A
Leica IIIC
Yashica Minister III
Zenith C, Zenit C, Zenit E
Minolta XG M, Z1
Nikon P50
"The way to see by faith is to shut the eye of reason."- Benjamin Franklin
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05-26-2012
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#18
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Bodger Extraordinaire
Dez is offline
Join Date: May 2009
Location: Mississauga, Ontario
Posts: 576
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Greyscale
Have you tried a bit of toothpaste on a soft cloth?
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I think this is a very good idea. You have to work at it a bit, but toothpaste is a very mild abrasive that could perobably do the job with a lot of rubbing.
Cheers,
Dez
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05-26-2012
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#19
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Registered User
Alowisney is offline
Join Date: Aug 2010
Location: Macon, GA
Age: 38
Posts: 262
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If you can find it, MAAS metal polish works very well. I used to use it to clean up that kind of corrosion on straight razors, which are made of high carbon steel, but it should work fine on aluminum, too.
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toothpaste |
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05-27-2012
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#20
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Registered User
tho60 is offline
Join Date: Jul 2010
Posts: 78
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toothpaste
Quote:
Originally Posted by Greyscale
Have you tried a bit of toothpaste on a soft cloth?
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Thanks, I have not tried it, but I will do!
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Maas |
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05-27-2012
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#21
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Registered User
tho60 is offline
Join Date: Jul 2010
Posts: 78
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Maas
Quote:
Originally Posted by Alowisney
If you can find it, MAAS metal polish works very well. I used to use it to clean up that kind of corrosion on straight razors, which are made of high carbon steel, but it should work fine on aluminum, too.
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MAAS can do miracles certainly, it costs 12.95 dollars in the U.S. though. In Hungary I cannot get it, no one shop sells this product, which I find a bit expensive comparing to the lens' price..
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picture 2. |
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05-27-2012
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#22
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Registered User
tho60 is offline
Join Date: Jul 2010
Posts: 78
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picture 2.
Quote:
Originally Posted by wolves3012
Based on that picture - I'd just live with it.
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I am attaching an other picture which shows more corrosion. If I could clean the barrel, why I would not try to do it? I am keen on doing my best 
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05-27-2012
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#23
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Registered User
Greyscale is offline
Join Date: Jul 2010
Location: Fort Dodge Iowa
Age: 52
Posts: 2,137
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Something else to try. Moisten a cloth with lemon juice and sprinkle some salt on it, and use that to clean the oxidation. This works on aluminum pots, so it should work on your lens.If you don't have lemon juice, any mild acid should work.
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05-27-2012
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#24
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MUSER53
muser53 is offline
Join Date: Dec 2008
Location: Berkeley, CA
Age: 60
Posts: 370
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I'll second using just a dab of toothpaste...just remember a little goes a long way.
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