discussed that yesterday with a friend and he removed it all with a small soft metal brush in many hours. If you take a too strong brush, too much of the aluminium will come off. Some polish it, others say the keep it as it was done to protect the aluminium.
I have kept it on my grey 750 for 11 years, but influenced by my friend I started now on my Highline and polished for one day already with the intakes out. I also will remove the valve covers and either polish them or repaint them. Now it is the right time to do it when the intakes are out of the engine.
So, what are you doing?
Or how did you do it?
Just left it as is?
I talked with a chemical technician and he told me that nitric acid (HNO3) is used to protect the aluminium tanks. Even nitric acid is transported in aluminium tanks.
However, I am not sure if the intakes are pure alu or probably plus some other metals.
He says that nitric acid gives a nice whitish shine and protects the alu. However, as he does not know what the exact specification is for the intakes and the valve covers, he told me first to carefully check it at a small part how the reaction is.
And he would start with a dilution of 10% nitric acid only.
Should wear protective glasses, gloves etc.
Any chemical engineer here who could comment on that?