Best way to clean glossy finish on speakers?


I have a microfiber cloth and distilled water and isopropyl alcohol. 
 

I can use all this to clean a TV screen and my glasses, but is there a preferred way to clean pristine glossy finish on speaker cabinets so that trace scratching does not appear?.

 

emergingsoul

@mijostyn,

I believe enough time has passed, couple of years I’d gather since my first & only observation give or take. Sending compliments on one stellar furniture wood shop you’ve put together / assembled, a labor of love indeed. Question if I may Sir, maybe somewhat OP related … nah, likely near impossible! :-) Any chance you’ve had the luxury operating any of Festool’s Line? Particularly Fes’s variable speed random orbit sanders along side and paired with their dust collection Vacs. Somewhat more costly in comparison compared to that of unsaid competition many others offer, however second-to-none in shear performance equaling less effort & time spent. Top tier phenomenal collection puts one’s H&L sandpaper inventory dwindling down to lets say 7 fold.

@dabel ,

Festool makes excellent gear. Their sander s are top notch. The problem is the price. At times they try to hard to be different like the Domino tool. Having buried myself in Milwaukee batteries I generally stick to their tools and I have not had a bad one. The one exception is Fein, another german company. I use their vacuum for dust capture on all my hand power tools and I have a 1/2 sheet Fein sander that I can't kill and I have used it to sand floors! I use a Lamello Plate joiner and Porter Cable routers.

I have kef r 11's in glossy black grills off. I use microfiber towels from Walmart from the auto department which do not have any bindings at the end with glass plus very lightly, also I wear a headlamp you will be surprised how much dust lays on the speaker cones themselves. You could see everything that you've been missing

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Ozzy...you're a genius. Read my previous post...or not...anyway, you're a genius.