I would follow CW's advice above. Better to be safe than sorry.
Robert
http://www.robertstrains.com/
Thanks for the suggestions.
Anyone else have any worthwhile advice for cleaning tinplate?
Do the paper stickers really matter?
I have some cars without stickers that I was thinking of washing with liquid kitchen soap and warm water \, as I do with postwar bodies (with tinplate it would be the whole car). If they turn out nice, maybe I should just forget about the stickers - the cars are nice, but not like new, so do the stickers really affect the value? 'Though they are nicely nostalgic.
just ruminating,
runtime
The paint / decoration on many Lionel prewar tinplate trains are very delicate. I've seen their red paint just wash away with plain water.
Louis Hertz recommended using a light oil with a clean, soft cloth to gentlly clean tinplate, Test First in a hidden area. I have had good sucess using a light oil, such as 3-in-1.
I wouldn't expect to be able to clean an old piece to factory new. Some dirt is going to remain. But isn't that part of the charm? :)
As an aside, Hetrz also recommended against polishing.
I also am interested in cleaning a set of mojave 610, 612 passenger cars without destroyiong the paper on the frames. Post-war trains are a lot easier to work with but tin plate presents a whole new set of problems. I would like to replace the cello windows and rewire for the lights without too much disassembling. Once that can be done, it was suggested to spray some Pledge on a rag and apply it to the body of the cars.
I want these trains to lok desent running,not packed away to be admired. If you get any info , pass it on!!
- medialocal
I'd like to clean my pre-war tinplate freights (mostly 800 series, and some lithographed cars).
Some of the cars have a paper glued to the underside of the frame with lubrication instructions, and I don't want to get this paper wet - thereby more or less ruling out dish soap and water cleaning for these cars.
1. how do I best clean the cars with the paper?
2. Is it a good idea to use dish soap and water on those which have no paper?
(I've rejected the idea of removing the bodies from the frames as I think some of the metal tabs would likely break.)
-runtime
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