Well, whilst I have my piny on, I clean our Dualit with Flash and a toothbrush to get the grease off, then polish with a non-abrasive alloy polish (not sovol).
Trick is not to let it get too bad before you attempt to clean it off !
I've got a Dualit Toaster that is at least 12 years old and looking at it the aluminium ends have got a bit marked. It sits next to the hob so I guess cooking spatter.
I've looked on the Dualit site and they say use only a damp cloth which has no impact at all. Is there anything I can use to smarten it up or just live with it until it gets to the uneconomic repair stage. The chrome part has survived much better and buffs up a treat with a microfibre
Sent from my moto g(7) plus using Tapatalk
Well, whilst I have my piny on, I clean our Dualit with Flash and a toothbrush to get the grease off, then polish with a non-abrasive alloy polish (not sovol).
Trick is not to let it get too bad before you attempt to clean it off !
Use a mildly abrasive to fo a proper clean. Done ours many times.
Sent from my SM-A528B using Tapatalk
But you’ll lose the patina and effect the value surely
It’s bare aluminium, so it oxidises. If you dismantle the toaster you could polish those end cheeks to a mirror shine on a buffing wheel with some polishing compound. Be prepared to rinse and repeat as of course it will re-oxidise.
I use a bit of Brasso on ours , does the trick and, as it's a "keeper" any reduction in value is not an issue .......
We used pink stuff recently and came out great.
Decided now in the new kitchen we don’t want a toaster & will revert to the oven grills. Another win for the sister I law.
A magic eraser would probably work. They're great on chrome, anyway.
https://www.sainsburys.co.uk/gol-ui/...extra-power-x2
All metal polishes are abrasive. Polishing oxidised aluminium necessitates removing the oxidised surface and for that you need abrasive! Those end cheeks on a Dualit toaster are massive so you won’t be polishing them away to nothing in this lifetime.
As I said, a polishing wheel with stick compounds is best but if you’re going down the cloth and elbow grease route Autosol is as good as anything.
i dont know what part you are talking about but those toasters can be kept going with brand new elements
Not all polishes are abrasive, I use a product called Brilliant Aluminium Polish which has a chemical action and used for classic bikes/cars etc.
- - - Updated - - -
Not all polishes are abrasive, I use a product called Brilliant Aluminium Polish which has a chemical action and used for classic bikes/cars etc.