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Sandra Bodycoat
12-20-2005, 09:13 PM
Hi
I have a stainless steel cutlery set that has or what appears to be rust
marks, how can I get rid of these?
thanks
sandra

Sawney Beane
12-20-2005, 09:13 PM
Sandra Bodycoat wrote:
>
> Hi
> I have a stainless steel cutlery set that has or what appears to be rust
> marks, how can I get rid of these?
> thanks
> sandra

There are polishes for stainless steel. I might try a scouring pad
first. The industrial solution is to soak it half an hour in 10%
nitric acid in a glass container.

Not all stainless steel is the same, and knives may rust before
flatware. Leaving stainless in contact with acidic or salty foods
can start rust. So can soaking it in contact with steel. Some say
stainless should not be washed in a dishwasher. However it's
washed, it should be towel dried.

Piper
12-21-2005, 01:14 AM
On Tue, 20 Dec 2005 15:33:19 -0500, Sawney Beane
<beadleXX@qwickconnect.net> wrote:

>Sandra Bodycoat wrote:
>>
>> Hi
>> I have a stainless steel cutlery set that has or what appears to be rust
>> marks, how can I get rid of these?
>> thanks
>> sandra

Use a soft scrub cleanser. Only takes a little.

>There are polishes for stainless steel. I might try a scouring pad
>first. The industrial solution is to soak it half an hour in 10%
>nitric acid in a glass container.
>
>Not all stainless steel is the same, and knives may rust before
>flatware. Leaving stainless in contact with acidic or salty foods
>can start rust. So can soaking it in contact with steel. Some say
>stainless should not be washed in a dishwasher. However it's
>washed, it should be towel dried.

I always wash mine in the dishwasher and let it dry there, too. It
always looks sparkling clean. I do use Jet Dry, which helps keep it
from spotting.

--
Piper

Sawney Beane
12-21-2005, 01:14 AM
Piper wrote:
>
> On Tue, 20 Dec 2005 15:33:19 -0500, Sawney Beane
> <beadleXX@qwickconnect.net> wrote:
>
> >
> >Not all stainless steel is the same, and knives may rust before
> >flatware. Leaving stainless in contact with acidic or salty foods
> >can start rust. So can soaking it in contact with steel. Some say
> >stainless should not be washed in a dishwasher. However it's
> >washed, it should be towel dried.
>
> I always wash mine in the dishwasher and let it dry there, too. It
> always looks sparkling clean. I do use Jet Dry, which helps keep it
> from spotting.
>

Strong detergents *could* harm some kinds of stainless steel.
Otherwise, the two possible problems in a dishwasher are that the
stainless may be in contact with other steel items and it may stay
wet, at least at spots. "Rinse and Hold" is especially bad.

Years ago we had a set of stainless flatware that did fine in the
dishwasher except that sometimes there would be a rusty stain on
the blade of a table knife. Those blades must have been a
different alloy. I think scouring powder would remove those stains.

Piper
12-21-2005, 01:14 AM
On Tue, 20 Dec 2005 18:58:08 -0500, Sawney Beane
<beadleXX@qwickconnect.net> wrote:

>Piper wrote:
>>
>> On Tue, 20 Dec 2005 15:33:19 -0500, Sawney Beane
>> <beadleXX@qwickconnect.net> wrote:
>>
>> >
>> >Not all stainless steel is the same, and knives may rust before
>> >flatware. Leaving stainless in contact with acidic or salty foods
>> >can start rust. So can soaking it in contact with steel. Some say
>> >stainless should not be washed in a dishwasher. However it's
>> >washed, it should be towel dried.
>>
>> I always wash mine in the dishwasher and let it dry there, too. It
>> always looks sparkling clean. I do use Jet Dry, which helps keep it
>> from spotting.
>>
>
>Strong detergents *could* harm some kinds of stainless steel.
>Otherwise, the two possible problems in a dishwasher are that the
>stainless may be in contact with other steel items and it may stay
>wet, at least at spots. "Rinse and Hold" is especially bad.
>
>Years ago we had a set of stainless flatware that did fine in the
>dishwasher except that sometimes there would be a rusty stain on
>the blade of a table knife. Those blades must have been a
>different alloy. I think scouring powder would remove those stains.

I think the blades are different because I get those little stains
sometimes, too, and can never figure out where they come from.

I have read that you shouldn't wash any kind of silver along with
stainless in the dishwasher, weather it be solid or plate. Does
something to the silver, but I can't remember what.

--
Piper

Muvin Gruvin
12-21-2005, 10:08 AM
daughter was recently married and got new cutlery as wedding
gifts....think she is the one who told me the insert recommend avoiding
lemon scented dishwasher soaps as it is hard on them.
Hard to find dishwasher soap without citrus.

Piper
12-21-2005, 08:12 PM
On Tue, 20 Dec 2005 23:30:09 -0800, QTQTQT@webtv.net (Muvin Gruvin)
wrote:

>daughter was recently married and got new cutlery as wedding
>gifts....think she is the one who told me the insert recommend avoiding
>lemon scented dishwasher soaps as it is hard on them.
>Hard to find dishwasher soap without citrus.

Interesting, and a lot of them do have citrus.

--
Piper

Sandra Bodycoat
12-23-2005, 08:55 PM
Thankyou to you all for your answers
sandra
"Piper" <piperetteMYSOCKS@direcway.com> wrote in message
news:30giq1th9iduhqtldd6e0q3h7ujugd7orf@4ax.com...
> On Tue, 20 Dec 2005 23:30:09 -0800, QTQTQT@webtv.net (Muvin Gruvin)
> wrote:
>
>>daughter was recently married and got new cutlery as wedding
>>gifts....think she is the one who told me the insert recommend avoiding
>>lemon scented dishwasher soaps as it is hard on them.
>>Hard to find dishwasher soap without citrus.
>
> Interesting, and a lot of them do have citrus.
>
> --
> Piper