Whats a solid virtuous chrome polisher or renewer for my vehicle?

i have a 1987 chevy caprice dont get me wrong the chrome isnt rusting of late looks dull i wanna bring that brightness and polish back what should i use and what will work?

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Why do ppl bring back out of...


Cola I saw it on mythbusters!!

Is in that deeply of traffic on...



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Cola I saw it on mythbusters!!

When would you enunciate is the best...


There are two products you need.

Flitz polish for the crome and Aeroglaze for the painted body work. Both are expensive, but highly forceful. A tube of Flitz the size of a travel sized tube of toothpaste runs around $5, and a Aeroglaze is probably running about $20 for a 20 oz can.

Both are available on-line if you look for them, and all else failing, budge to an airport that supports small aircraft and find a pilot shop; they'll probably have both.

The trick I learned be to put Flitz on a buff pad in a cordless drill and attack the showing metal I wanted to shine. If I could get the stainless exhaust stacks of a Merlin IIB to shine, you shouldn't have any problems with your bumpers.

Aeroglaze is uncluttered stuff. It's not required, but a good rinsing with a pressure washer and letting tha coup¨¦ dry is a good idea. After that, grab hold of a handful of rags and slather the stuff over everything that's painted.

In moments, it will dry to a slight haze, and wipe with a clean dry napkin should brush the stuff right off. It'll take the grime and oxidation that pressure wash didn't with it as it falls to the garage floor.

As much as I hate to verbs anything, it's always been stodgy, (and lucerative,) to have a couple of products up my sleeve that could perform the supposedly impossible, and see the impossible take place as I did it.

I routinely got $50 from one customer just for polishing his stacks every few flights. I also get 3 times the cost of a tube of Flitz every time one customer came in. Not a unpromising return on the investment.

Have fun.
JT

If you could sustain to form a...

Eagle one have a product that works unbelievable. It's a cotton pad, comes contained by a small silver can. I use it all the time for both my personal and work vehicle. Best thing I enjoy ever tried.
There are two products you need.

Flitz polish for the crome and Aeroglaze for the painted body work. Both are expensive, but highly forceful. A tube of Flitz the size of a travel sized tube of toothpaste runs around $5, and a Aeroglaze is probably running about $20 for a 20 oz can.

Both are available on-line if you look for them, and all else failing, budge to an airport that supports small aircraft and find a pilot shop; they'll probably have both.

The trick I learned be to put Flitz on a buff pad in a cordless drill and attack the showing metal I wanted to shine. If I could get the stainless exhaust stacks of a Merlin IIB to shine, you shouldn't have any problems with your bumpers.

Aeroglaze is uncluttered stuff. It's not required, but a good rinsing with a pressure washer and letting tha coup¨¦ dry is a good idea. After that, grab hold of a handful of rags and slather the stuff over everything that's painted.

In moments, it will dry to a slight haze, and wipe with a clean dry napkin should brush the stuff right off. It'll take the grime and oxidation that pressure wash didn't with it as it falls to the garage floor.

As much as I hate to verbs anything, it's always been stodgy, (and lucerative,) to have a couple of products up my sleeve that could perform the supposedly impossible, and see the impossible take place as I did it.

I routinely got $50 from one customer just for polishing his stacks every few flights. I also get 3 times the cost of a tube of Flitz every time one customer came in. Not a unpromising return on the investment.

Have fun.
JT

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