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Hi everyone!

After 40 years of pleading, my father is finally letting me go through his postwar Lionel. It was bought used as he collected in the 80's (and moved onto collecting Marklin HO around 1990), and has sat in a climate controlled closet since.

Anyhow, many items he simply left "as found" with the exception of mechanical servicing. I wanted to clean up a set of aluminum passenger cars and a 2056 steamer to start, and I was wondering if there was something better/more effective than soap and water, but still safe to use? None of this stuff is junk by any means, but there is some light surface dulling/fading I'd love to somehow remove/polish off. It isn't really dirt per-se

Thoughts? And while I'm asking- any tips for the passenger car axles/trucks to improve rolling qualities?

Last edited by jpcanton
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Are you dealing with aluminum Budd-style extrusions?  They are exceedingly difficult to clean.  I use aluminum polish (Mothers, California Purple, etc) and a mild Scotchbrite when light corrosion sets in.  The only way to get the polish out of the grooves is with talc or flour - a lot of it.

But most Lionel extrusions appear to be anodized, so corrosion should be less of a problem.

Thanks all! Indeed, they are the extruded budd-style cars. It sounds like a job, but polish if probably the answer in the end!

Yesterday I went through the whole super chief set with a jewelers polish wheel in the dremel to clean the rail-contact points on the wheelsets, what a job... I have to say though, not one spark or sputter! Today I'll take a break from an HO scale project to service the locomotives.

Thanks! Other suggestions are of course welcome

I have used Simichrome or MAAS metal polish for the Lionel aluminum cars, on pieces of wadded paper towel or tissue. Purists would scoff because it eliminates that 'patina' that the cars get over time (the early ones apparently were not anodized). I had some with what looked like rust stains. The set, when done, was nice and shiny, unlike 'original'. I also rewired most of the cars since the early wire cracks and can short. It's a bunch of elbow grease required, but I did really like the look when done.

Jim

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