No Dave, because it won't work on a mill finish that is stained well into the aluminum. A mill finish looks like this: VVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVV. To get a stain out you have to remove the stained metal at the sides and bottom of the v's. It isn't like a t-shirt with a stain where Shout or Tide will take it out Thus, you have to work the cleaner to death with a buffer to get it to remove metal in the valleys. The brass wool is useless as it only hits the peaks, but serious on smooth metal.
Most cleaning compounds will eat aluminum. Walbernize will do it, but the fine grit has a tough time removing metal from the valleys requiring an electric buffer. The Woody cleaner would be a fine grit like Walbernize meant to clean smooth aluminum/fiberglass without scratching. Both will get the job done if you invest enough time & work.
What folks like jsl aren't catching on to is that a few hours of prevention can save 100 hours of nasty work. I can only suggest that these folks search the site for Woody & Patina. Read the posts and one will find answers to questions like Dave's, + 150 more.
Hilditch
Most cleaning compounds will eat aluminum. Walbernize will do it, but the fine grit has a tough time removing metal from the valleys requiring an electric buffer. The Woody cleaner would be a fine grit like Walbernize meant to clean smooth aluminum/fiberglass without scratching. Both will get the job done if you invest enough time & work.
What folks like jsl aren't catching on to is that a few hours of prevention can save 100 hours of nasty work. I can only suggest that these folks search the site for Woody & Patina. Read the posts and one will find answers to questions like Dave's, + 150 more.
Hilditch