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BilletTechnology
06-07-2007, 04:08 PM
Hi folks.

I thought I would sticky this up for overall general care of your billet products.

If you have just satin finishes; a couple of times a month for your interior products just take a fine microfiber cloth and apply a bit of WD40 to the cloth and wipe your pieces down lightly to the grain of the tool path. This will keep your pieces looking good.

If you have satin under the hood you can do the same thing as with your interior parts lightly apply some WD40 to the parts or a fine microfiber cloth and wipe them down to the grain of the tool path. Under the hood pieces you should check on them at least once a week to keep them clean and looking brand new :)

For those of you with bright dip anodize under the hood or color anodize under the hood PLEASE only wipe your parts down with a soft microfiber cloth as needed. You can use a light spray of non-streak windex or any similar product to keep them clean. On any anodzied under the hood products; DO NOT USE ANY ABRASHIVE CLEANERS OR CHEMICALS. This will strip the anodize from your parts and cause discoloration. Please if you have a professional detail your car, please tell your detailer to not use any degreaser or solvants. Again this will strip the anodize and ruin your finish. The whole purpose of anodize bright dip or colors is to provide the protection on the parts so that you only need to wipe them clean with a cloth and nothing more.

Folks if you have polish, I highly recommend your purchase from our good friends at BMC Performance the BlingMaster kit http://www.bmcperf.com/shop/product.php?productid=17309&cat=0&page=1
This is a great product and the results can not be beat. It beats Mothers hands down. Not only is it a great product but you will be treated right by purchasing from BMC. Lisa and Kris are awesome people and care about customer service.

Thank to everyone who has purchased from us. We appreciate you all. :)




Nifo
06-07-2007, 04:54 PM
B-E-S-T customer service EVER! but what about the emblems and the polishd pistol grip?

I wish I was in the states! U might see me every day at ur shop :P

BilletTechnology
06-05-2008, 08:05 PM
couple of other things here too guys.

A light mineral oil is great for cleaning off your emblems. Put it on with a soft micro fiber cloth and then wipe it with a clean microfiber cloth.

Another great thing to use when you need to get water spots out is a Mr. Clean Magic Eraser. We love that here. You can use it on any finish. Just buy the regular ones, not the ones with bleach or Fabreeze in them. These work great. We use them daily here when we clean our parts and ready to package them up.

XLR8
12-21-2008, 02:55 PM
couple of other things here too guys.

A light mineral oil is great for cleaning off your emblems. Put it on with a soft micro fiber cloth and then wipe it with a clean microfiber cloth.

Another great thing to use when you need to get water spots out is a Mr. Clean Magic Eraser. We love that here. You can use it on any finish. Just buy the regular ones, not the ones with bleach or Fabreeze in them. These work great. We use them daily here when we clean our parts and ready to package them up.

I washed my car yesterday at a "do it yourself" place (the only way my car gets washed). Anyhow, when I started detailing under the hood, I noticed a couple of water spots on my power steering reservoir cover. So today while out grocery shoping with the wife, I checked out the Mr. Clean Majic Eraser (the regular ones). After reading the info and precautions on the back of the box, I didn't buy it because it sounds like it has an abrasive on it and would scratch the anodized finish. I did pick up a bottle of mineral oil and that put an amazing shine on the cover but didn't get the water spots off.

Has anyone other than BT used the Majic Eraser on water spots without scratching up the part? My parts are red anodized.