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Warren, when I was in High School and had no money nor a job, I used to wash & detail my richer buddie's cars with the wide-whitewall tires then popular. I found that stolen Brillo pads from my Mom's kitchen worked best. My friends were not precision drivers (or maybe that's asking a lot from  '40-'50s Chevs & Fords driven by teen-agers). So there were a LOT of curb scuffs to hand-scrub off. In spite of fooling with cars a lot, my hands & fingernails were spotless during this period!

Nowadays there's probably something better, but its still going to take some physical labor. I seriously doubt if any of the no-work-spray-on liquids actually word as no-contact cleaners. There is also rubber tire touch-up paint for when the color has been hopelessly faded by time or abuse. Try AutoZone or maybe the Web.

What is wet and dry??ThxSent from my Verizon, Samsung Galaxy smartphone
-------- Original message --------From: The De Tomaso Forums <alerts@crowdstack.com> Date: 1/4/21 6:32 AM (GMT-07:00) To: warrenvictor <vvics442@aol.com> Subject: [New Reply] White letter tires == To reply by email, write above this line. ==New Reply By PercyWhite letter tiresReply by Percy I have never tried brilo pads with bleach but wet and dry around 300 grit with some water works wonders. the letters come up clear and sharp. Rinse off and your done. [ View Reply ]The De Tomaso ForumsYou received this based on your notification settings. You can adjust your settings or unsubscribe anytime.

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