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Item Relisted! FS/FT Miracle Polishing Cloth - Gentlemen, buff your cylinders . . . !

Also something else it works on great are the baffle stacks in a SpectreII. I don't want to "dip" them and make hazmat so always looking for another method. I'll try to get some pics this weekend; but the blast baffle is almost clean and the 2nd baffle in the stack looks like it came from the factory with about 2 minutes of rubbing. This looks like it will be my new go-to method for cleaning these PITA baffles.

Awesome, thanks man. Can't wait to see photos of the before and after . . . !
 
gotta tell you guys. you'll be amazed at what these do for blued guns. doesn't hurt the finish and gives a deep luster. also leaves a protective coating. good stuff.
 
Here are the baffle stacks from a SpectreII. The baffles has already been cleaned once and looked like the ones on the right. The left stack were done with polishing cloth and finger pressure only. First baffle on left is the blast baffle and was still caked up before using polish cloth.. I also did the tube and it is completely smooth inside now and stack slide easily back in. These are well worth the money just for baffles, everything else is just a bonus.
 

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Here are the baffle stacks from a SpectreII. The baffles has already been cleaned once and looked like the ones on the right. The left stack were done with polishing cloth and finger pressure only. First baffle on left is the blast baffle and was still caked up before using polish cloth.. I also did the tube and it is completely smooth inside now and stack slide easily back in. These are well worth the money just for baffles, everything else is just a bonus.

Allsmiles Allsmiles ,

I'm not very experienced with suppressors. I am guessing that most / some of the black that remains is actually deeply burned into the surface of the metal? I know there isn't much any cloth or compound do about issues like rust, deep pitting, and metallurgical / chemical damage to metal. On a scale of 1 to 10 (1 being FAILED and10 being EXCEEDED), how did these cloths meet your expectations on cleaning the internal baffles of your suppressors?

I can see the photos, but not sure I understand the delta of before and after . . . . I'm used to seeing "shiny, shiny."

Z

Suppressor-baffels.jpg
 
Allsmiles Allsmiles ,

I'm not very experienced with suppressors. I am guessing that most / some of the black that remains is actually deeply burned into the surface of the metal? I know there isn't much any cloth or compound do about issues like rust, deep pitting, and metallurgical / chemical damage to metal. On a scale of 1 to 10 (1 being FAILED and10 being EXCEEDED), how did these cloths meet your expectations on cleaning the internal baffles of your suppressors?

I can see the photos, but not sure I understand the delta of before and after . . . . I'm used to seeing "shiny, shiny."

Z

View attachment 691379
I would be very happy with the result I see in this picture..
 
About an 8-9 level. 22lr baffles get powder and lead driven into them pretty badly. The blast baffle takes the brunt of the abuse and I think the only way to get them completely clean is either "dip" or tumble with steel pins. Also, this was the second cleaning for the ones on the left. The blast baffle and the fist couple behind it are normally covered in melted lead and really tough to get clean. If I had taken pics before anything was done, the difference would have been much greater as everything was black and caked up.
 
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