Hello EL, If you have successfully cleaned the substrate thoroughly with the polish then you have to thoroughly remove the polish residue off the metal until nothing of any color is coming off onto the rag/cloth. If you have streaking, it is because the metal still has residue from the polishing beforehand. To clean it properly, you fold up a 2-3 wide in X 10 in long cloth/rag strip into several folds, dip it into a small container of Preservative to submerge the rag/cloth, ring it out and then go up & down or Side to side ( whichever the satin finish grain/pattern is going) and continue to take full length wiping and folding over the rag/cloth, and repeat the wiping and rotating of the rag/cloth until the rag/cloth is as clean & white as when first submerged into the container of Preservative. You have to take full-length wipes so you don't have any start and stop areas because you are pushing/moving the residue down and off the panel. Once you have everything super clean and the preservative dries, you can take a microfiber cloth and do a light buffing if any streaks still appear. It is the dirt/residue that is causing the streaking. Once you start buffing with the microfiber cloth and have any dark residue coming off the dry Preserved panel, then you know it wasn't clean enough and hence the streaking. I hope that will be a clear and effective answer to solve your question. Kind Regards, Nathan
@@briteworksinternationalinc1177 hi Nathan….through some trial and error I was able to figure out it was user error and it wasn’t clean enough before applying the preservative. What you just described is what I did and it worked wonders on my Coyote BBQ. My neighbor is going to be buying some for his Lion BBQ as well. Thank you!
@@el9107 Sounds great El! I am glad to hear about fine minds being put to work and not giving up on an initial negative outcome, excellent work, and congratulations on critical thinking measures that you are blessed with having!
Yes, it would, but you have to use a very soft cotton or microfiber cloth and I would recommend soaking the surface with the polish for 5-10 minutes, just don't let it dry! If it drys, re-wet it and then very gently polish in one direction do not put heavy pressure, light, light, light and then check your finish from there. Mirrored Stainless will scratch so proceed with extreme care!
Thanks for a reply. There are these little mirrored strips of stainless around the edges of the hood. I am trying to figure how to do the SS that has grain running either parallel or perpendicular into the polished edge without messing up the mirrored edge But, I just finished the two lower doors that were badly stained. They look amazing now. This is an amazing product. My grill is 12 years old and sits about 50' from the salt marsh.
Hello Johann, If there are streaks, that means there still is residue from the cleaning process that is still present and draging across the substrait. You can continue to rotate your rag until there is no dark residue on the wiping sections of the cloth.
Hello Johann, here was the same issue from a person a year ago. Hello EL, If you have successfully cleaned the substrate thoroughly with the polish then you have to thoroughly remove the polish residue off the metal until nothing of any color is coming off onto the rag/cloth. If you have streaking, it is because the metal still has residue from the polishing beforehand. To clean it properly, you fold up a 2-3 wide in X 10 in long cloth/rag strip into several folds, dip it into a small container of Preservative to submerge the rag/cloth, ring it out and then go up & down or Side to side ( whichever the satin finish grain/pattern is going) and continue to take full length wiping and folding over the rag/cloth, and repeat the wiping and rotating of the rag/cloth until the rag/cloth is as clean & white as when first submerged into the container of Preservative. You have to take full-length wipes so you don't have any start and stop areas because you are pushing/moving the residue down and off the panel. Once you have everything super clean and the preservative dries, you can take a microfiber cloth and do a light buffing if any streaks still appear. It is the dirt/residue that is causing the streaking. Once you start buffing with the microfiber cloth and have any dark residue coming off the dry Preserved panel, then you know it wasn't clean enough and hence the streaking. I hope that will be a clear and effective answer to solve your question. Kind Regards, Nathan 1 Reply E L E L 1 year ago @Briteworks International Inc. hi Nathan….through some trial and error I was able to figure out it was user error and it wasn’t clean enough before applying the preservative. What you just described is what I did and it worked wonders on my Coyote BBQ. My neighbor is going to be buying some for his Lion BBQ as well. Thank you! Reply Briteworks International Inc. Briteworks International Inc. 1 year ago @E L Sounds great El! I am glad to hear about fine minds being put to work and not giving up on an initial negative outcome, excellent work, and congratulations on critical thinking measures that you are blessed with having!
Any stainless steel can corrode. Depending on the grade, it can be more resistant to corrosion. The particular corrosive will also greatly affect how susceptible the stainless is to corrosion.
Hello Kenneth, I did mention that there would be one, but I also realized this is a skill set that the average viewer may fail at acquiring the same results as I would be demonstrating. You are the first person who has wanted to attempt this procedure so you can go onto the website: www.briteworksinc.com/?page=contact and send me an email with your contact number, or I will send you mine and discuss it in detail and see if you are feeling comfortable in your ability to execute this technique. It isn't as hard as you may think but does require some preparation, concentration, and some hand/eye coordination. It can be achieved also with a guide like a straight edge to keep the grain perfectly straight. Thank you for your interest and have a splendid day! Kind Regards, Nathan Nass
Kenneth Vaughan Hello Kenneth, I was going to do that one, and then had a change of mind. Please send me a message on the website and I will get in touch with you on the technic. Thank you! Kind Regards, Nathan
maybe put a cloth down to stop that panel sliding about :P
What products are you using and where can we purchase them?
How do you apply the preserve to not allow “stripes” to form? Polish works great but the preserve stripe makes it look horrible
Hello EL, If you have successfully cleaned the substrate thoroughly with the polish then you have to thoroughly remove the polish residue off the metal until nothing of any color is coming off onto the rag/cloth. If you have streaking, it is because the metal still has residue from the polishing beforehand. To clean it properly, you fold up a 2-3 wide in X 10 in long cloth/rag strip into several folds, dip it into a small container of Preservative to submerge the rag/cloth, ring it out and then go up & down or Side to side ( whichever the satin finish grain/pattern is going) and continue to take full length wiping and folding over the rag/cloth, and repeat the wiping and rotating of the rag/cloth until the rag/cloth is as clean & white as when first submerged into the container of Preservative. You have to take full-length wipes so you don't have any start and stop areas because you are pushing/moving the residue down and off the panel. Once you have everything super clean and the preservative dries, you can take a microfiber cloth and do a light buffing if any streaks still appear. It is the dirt/residue that is causing the streaking. Once you start buffing with the microfiber cloth and have any dark residue coming off the dry Preserved panel, then you know it wasn't clean enough and hence the streaking. I hope that will be a clear and effective answer to solve your question.
Kind Regards,
Nathan
@@briteworksinternationalinc1177 hi Nathan….through some trial and error I was able to figure out it was user error and it wasn’t clean enough before applying the preservative. What you just described is what I did and it worked wonders on my Coyote BBQ. My neighbor is going to be buying some for his Lion BBQ as well. Thank you!
@@el9107 Sounds great El! I am glad to hear about fine minds being put to work and not giving up on an initial negative outcome, excellent work, and congratulations on critical thinking measures that you are blessed with having!
Where do I get everything?
I have a Lynx grill with highly polished areas. Will your product work without damage to highly polished areas.
Yes, it would, but you have to use a very soft cotton or microfiber cloth and I would recommend soaking the surface with the polish for 5-10 minutes, just don't let it dry! If it drys, re-wet it and then very gently polish in one direction do not put heavy pressure, light, light, light and then check your finish from there. Mirrored Stainless will scratch so proceed with extreme care!
Thanks for a reply. There are these little mirrored strips of stainless around the edges of the hood. I am trying to figure how to do the SS that has grain running either parallel or perpendicular into the polished edge without messing up the mirrored edge
But, I just finished the two lower doors that were badly stained. They look amazing now. This is an amazing product.
My grill is 12 years old and sits about 50' from the salt marsh.
How do I get rid of the streaks?
Hello Johann, If there are streaks, that means there still is residue from the cleaning process that is still present and draging across the substrait. You can continue to rotate your rag until there is no dark residue on the wiping sections of the cloth.
Hello Johann, here was the same issue from a person a year ago.
Hello EL, If you have successfully cleaned the substrate thoroughly with the polish then you have to thoroughly remove the polish residue off the metal until nothing of any color is coming off onto the rag/cloth. If you have streaking, it is because the metal still has residue from the polishing beforehand. To clean it properly, you fold up a 2-3 wide in X 10 in long cloth/rag strip into several folds, dip it into a small container of Preservative to submerge the rag/cloth, ring it out and then go up & down or Side to side ( whichever the satin finish grain/pattern is going) and continue to take full length wiping and folding over the rag/cloth, and repeat the wiping and rotating of the rag/cloth until the rag/cloth is as clean & white as when first submerged into the container of Preservative. You have to take full-length wipes so you don't have any start and stop areas because you are pushing/moving the residue down and off the panel. Once you have everything super clean and the preservative dries, you can take a microfiber cloth and do a light buffing if any streaks still appear. It is the dirt/residue that is causing the streaking. Once you start buffing with the microfiber cloth and have any dark residue coming off the dry Preserved panel, then you know it wasn't clean enough and hence the streaking. I hope that will be a clear and effective answer to solve your question.
Kind Regards,
Nathan
1
Reply
E L
E L
1 year ago
@Briteworks International Inc. hi Nathan….through some trial and error I was able to figure out it was user error and it wasn’t clean enough before applying the preservative. What you just described is what I did and it worked wonders on my Coyote BBQ. My neighbor is going to be buying some for his Lion BBQ as well. Thank you!
Reply
Briteworks International Inc.
Briteworks International Inc.
1 year ago
@E L Sounds great El! I am glad to hear about fine minds being put to work and not giving up on an initial negative outcome, excellent work, and congratulations on critical thinking measures that you are blessed with having!
Rusted stainless ?? Uhh... must be very poor quality ?
Any stainless steel can corrode. Depending on the grade, it can be more resistant to corrosion. The particular corrosive will also greatly affect how susceptible the stainless is to corrosion.
Bruh. Rub the metal with the cream. Video done. No need for using every big word you can think of. 20 second video
Stainless steal outdoors is so stupid
Where would I find the video about the "re-graining" you mentioned?
Hello Kenneth, I did mention that there would be one, but I also realized this is a skill set that the average viewer may fail at acquiring the same results as I would be demonstrating. You are the first person who has wanted to attempt this procedure so you can go onto the website: www.briteworksinc.com/?page=contact and send me an email with your contact number, or I will send you mine and discuss it in detail and see if you are feeling comfortable in your ability to execute this technique. It isn't as hard as you may think but does require some preparation, concentration, and some hand/eye coordination. It can be achieved also with a guide like a straight edge to keep the grain perfectly straight. Thank you for your interest and have a splendid day!
Kind Regards,
Nathan Nass
Kenneth Vaughan Hello Kenneth, I was going to do that one, and then had a change of mind. Please send me a message on the website and I will get in touch with you on the technic. Thank you!
Kind Regards,
Nathan