Can the electrolysis method only be used for ferrous metals (steel, iron and such) or can it be used for any metal that will carry a current? Or in other words can it also be used with Aluminum if you use another hunk of aluminum as the sacrificial electrode?
Brent
1958 107 SW - Sold to a better home
1965 109 SW - nearly running well
1966 88 SW - running but needing attention
1969 109 P-UP
I am thinking yes. I have seen a kit sold for household use that consists of a sheet of metal (anode or cathode) and a powder that is basically the washing soda as described in the link above. The metal sheet and the powder go into a bucket with water and the pieces to be de-tarnished are dipped in. It does a great job of removing tarnish from silver, brass, etc., i.e.- polishing the silverware. Light tarnish is removed almost instantly.
But w/o the power supply, it is probably going to be a lot more gentle, as you would want for silver.
On a similar note, on Mythbusters (Discovery channel show) they used a DC power supply and salsa to erode metal bars (simulating a jail break) and they managed to eat through a thick iron bar in about a month. AC didn't work at all.
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