I was surprised that there was such a response to my
offer of explaining how to restore stainless steel. 
 
Steve said:
 
I would love to learn how to do this.  Always seemed
too daunting of a procedure to me.  Is it easier than
I imagined?
 
Restoring stainless (or other metal) trim is not a
difficult task if you follow the steps, but it is time
consuming and requires patience. 
 
To polishing any metal, you first need to understand
why you are doing what you will be doing. 
 
Let’s take a piece (of stainless or other metals) that
has a mirror like shine. When you look at it you see
yourself undistorted.  If the piece is curved, your
image is distorted like a funhouse mirror.  If the
piece has a sharp crease, you could see two images
reflecting in different directions.  Essentially, a
dent is like the funhouse mirror, and a scratch is
like a small sharp crease.  
 
With many small scratches, an image reflects in so
many different directions the reflection appears dull.
 Our goal is to get all of the reflections to reflect
in the same direction, which will give you a mirror
like finish.
 
These next steps could serve as a guide through trim
restoration / metal polishing.  This is how I do it,
some people may do it other ways but I was able to get
great results like this:

Note:  The assumption is made that you will work
safely.  When welding – you would wear a welding
helmet.  When sanding, you will wear safety goggles
and appropriate face masks, etc.
 
Step 1 - Assess and repair your stainless
 
If you have stainless that is torn, cut, or has holes,
repairs must be made.  Tears, cuts, and holes would
have to be welded to make a solid piece to work with. 
If you do not have a welder or are not confident in
your metal repair abilities, a local welding shop can
often make such repairs for just a few dollars.
 
Step 2 - Make your dents small
 
Here, you need to get the metal piece as close to its
original shape as possible. To do this, you get to be
creative.  If a dent can be removed by simply pressing
it, go for it.  Often there are sharp creases where
there shouldn’t be any.  Most times you can remove
these creases with a small hammer and a dolly.  A
gentle curve dolly can be made from a smooth piece of
pipe. Sharp details can be brought back with angle
iron or chisels acting as dollies or shaping tools.  
Ultimately, you are eliminating any low spots.   If
you hit the piece from the back side and a tiny dimple
extends past the face of the metal (creating a small
high spot), do not worry. We will address this in our
next step.
 
Step 3 - File off imperfections
 
Any tiny dimple that extend beyond the face of the
piece (a high spot) can be removed with a fine metal
file.  
 
 
**PLEASE NOTE:  When filing, sanding, and polishing do
so in one direction.  It allows the reflection that
will occur later on to reflect in one direction.
 
 
Step 4 - Use sand paper

The file (when removing the high spots) left
scratches.  We need to progressively make the
scratches smaller by sanding then buffing the
scratches out.  We can start out with a 200 grit sand
paper, sanding in one direction until the entire
surface of the piece looks like a continuous grain
“brushed stainless” appearance.  This now aligns all
of the scratches in the piece in one direction.   

Note: Use an appropriate sanding block whenever
possible to eliminate small high spots, detect low
spots, and avoid sanding a groove the shape of your
finger into the piece.
 

Step 5 - Repeat Step 4 with 500, 1000, 1500, and the
finest that can be found

The finer the scratches become the better the finish
will be when you buff your work. (Be sure to sand your
entire piece, not just the repair with the finer sand
paper.)


Step 6 - Use a stiff buffing wheel with a coarse grit
rouge (buffing compound)

Note:  When handling metal trim pieces, it often has
sharp edges.  If you are holding the piece to a
motorized buffing wheel, and if it should slip from
your hands, you could get cut.  Wear gloves (of some
sort) to prevent you from getting cut, bleeding all
over, and creating more clean up later.

Also  Some fabric of the buffing wheel or compound may
fly off when the motor is turned on and you start to
press the metal to the wheel.  Just a reminder on the
safety thing… Wear safety goggle and a face mask so
you do not inhale your parts and pieces.


Think of buffing like using sandpaper - which makes
the scratches even smaller.  Apply the rouge to the
wheel by turning on the motor and lightly pressing in
the rouge into the wheel.  Once you have the compound
on the buffer, lightly press the stainless into the
wheel.  The brushed look will start to disappear and a
shine will start to appear.

Don’t be afraid to press the piece into the wheel with
a firm pressure.  You will have to experiment with
various pressures until you get comfortable with
working with the buffer.

Step 7 – Just like step 6, but use a medium buffing
wheel with a medium grit rouge

Step 8 - Just like step 6, but use a soft buffing
wheel with a fine grit rouge

During the last 3 steps, you will see the luster
increase with the finer rouge used, but you may find
also find dark spots appear as you buff… not to worry.
 Often it is compound build-up or heat.  You can go
over it with lighter pressure on the buffer and often
it will go away.  Also try wiping the piece with a
damp cloth.  Excess compound may just disappear.  

If you still see scratches in the finish, you may need
to go back as far as the sand paper (depending how
deep the scratch is) but often the buffer will remove
the rest.

Now you should have a brilliant piece ready to install
back on the car.

The project is time consuming, but rewarding.

Note:  I once had a piece slip out of my hands while
buffing and wrap up into a little ball around the
buffer.  The piece was able to be hammered out, filed,
sanded, and buffed.  It went back onto my car later
that evening.  If you should happen to see my car, I
would like to challenge anyone to try to find which
piece it was!  :-)


Best of luck,

Joe Ferrero
Geneseo, NY


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