Juma Maintenance and Care

Rob Fisher

ECIGSSA Admin
Staff member
Administrator
VIP
FINES MASTER
LV
64
 
Joined
3/2/14
Posts
39,399
Awards
51
Age
68
Location
Winston Park, Durbs
Well Juma is way more resilient than stab wood but if you like me and hold your mod in your hand all day it eventually starts to dull a bit and requires some maintenance.

I checked with the modmaker and he said they use a polishing wheel... so I figured I could use my Dremel... I have polishing goodies and I have the polishing compound! Should be a breeze...
Polish 001.JPG
Seems simple enough... right?
Polish 002.JPG

Not so much... fail... now I have dull marks on my juma... what a goose!
Goose.jpg
I think it needs a real polishing wheel and a soft and fluffy thingy! :oops:
 
[Inserts Bummer Rating]

That sucks Rob! Hopefully not properly damaged and can be buffed out by a proper polish?
 
@Rob Fisher - that was such a pity

I can imagine that as you took out the Dremel you thought to yourself - ah, now you gonna be shiny again!

Hope you can get it sorted - those mods are so gorgeous they need to be at their best!
 
@Rob Fisher - that was such a pity

I can imagine that as you took out the Dremel you thought to yourself - ah, now you gonna be shiny again!

Hope you can get it sorted - those mods are so gorgeous they need to be at their best!

@smilelykumeenit PM'ed me... I used the wrong compound... will go out and about to get the right stuff.
 
When polishing with a buffing wheel remember to move it around, as the buffing wheel heats up due to the friction, this WILL leave marks.

The wider the buffing wheel the better, as you will soon see streaks, rotate your buffing surface often .... like you are mowing the lawn, always hand buff afterwards with a light polishing compound to smooth out the polishing lines.

Always use one buffing wheel per material.... do not mix them up as you will contaminate the wheel with other materials that could scratch your pretty mod.

a decent polishing cloth (never wash these ever)
http://www.capewatch.co.za/product/polish-cloth-2/

Unipol - peerfect polishing compound - it says metal, but hard plastics should be fine
http://www.capewatch.co.za/product/semichrome-liquid-polish/

Unipol Bar - for machine polishing
http://www.capewatch.co.za/product/unipol-polish/

S.Steel Polish . for all your steel bits, too hard for brass and copper though
http://www.capewatch.co.za/product/dialux-polish-420g/
 
Last edited:
When polishing with a buffing wheel remember to move it around, as the buffing wheel heats up due to the friction, this WILL leave marks.

The wider the buffing wheel the better, as you will soon see streaks, rotate your buffing surface often .... like you are mowing the lawn, always hand buff afterwards with a light polishing compound to smooth out the polishing lines.

Always use one buffing wheel per material.... do not mix them up as you will contaminate the wheel with other materials that could scratch your pretty mod.

Roger that @HPBotha! I'm sending it down to @Genosmate who is an expert... I'm banned for bringing a Dremel anywhere near my Juma and Stab Wood mods now.
 
Back
Top