Hi, what secrets or techniques do you vintage tube amp owners do to make an old tarnished output jacks shiny, outside and in? I know most of us would want a gold replacement jack but if you can't have that at the time what do you do. After trying little strips of 320 grit sand paper around the outside of the jack I'm about to try Brasso with a used Tootsie Pop stick and a thin rag in the inside.Someone must have some better idea.....thanks..Mark Korda
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Topic - Tube Amp Vintage Jacks - mark.korda@myfairpoint.net 05:27:28 07/19/15 (14)
- RE: Tube Amp Vintage Jacks - geezerrocket 06:03:09 07/20/15 (0)
- RE: Tube Amp Vintage Jacks - Alpha Al 11:08:32 07/19/15 (6)
- RE: Tube Amp Vintage Jacks - mark.korda@myfairpoint.net 11:49:53 07/19/15 (5)
- RE: Tube Amp Vintage Jacks - Eli Duttman 12:22:29 07/19/15 (4)
- RE: Tube Amp Vintage Jacks - dee eye why 13:31:39 07/19/15 (3)
- RE: Tube Amp Vintage Jacks - Eli Duttman 16:18:44 07/19/15 (2)
- RE: Tube Amp Vintage Jacks - Crazy Dave 08:12:04 07/20/15 (0)
- RE: Tube Amp Vintage Jacks - mark.korda@myfairpoint.net 06:10:31 07/20/15 (0)
- RE: Tube Amp Vintage Jacks - dee eye why 08:09:43 07/19/15 (4)
- RE: Tube Amp Vintage Jacks - Crazy Dave 09:07:58 07/20/15 (3)
- RE: Tube Amp Vintage Jacks - dee eye why 15:47:32 07/20/15 (2)
- RE: Tube Amp Vintage Jacks - Crazy Dave 07:14:05 07/22/15 (1)
- RE: Tube Amp Vintage Jacks - dee eye why 08:42:00 07/22/15 (0)
- RE: Tube Amp Vintage Jacks - Awe-d-o-file 06:17:29 07/19/15 (0)