Deep clean chrome wheels with Mothers PowerBall Mini

rzatch

New member
First let me say that I wasn’t planning on doing a product review but once in awhile you stumble across something that works so well you are really wowed by it. And that’s what happened when I used my Mothers Powerball Mini to deep clean my chrome wheels. Had I known it was going to work so well I would have planned it out so I could have documented it with more step by step pictures but as I said I was just planning on cleaning my wheels and didn’t think they were going to need any more than a hand polish.

About a month ago I had to have some warranty paint work done on my new truck and found a light amount of clear paint over spray on the running board and left front wheel but hadn’t a chance to take care of it until the other day. Seeing how it was a very light amount I started off with Mothers Chrome Polish and a MF towel by hand. I was able to get it off of the running board without much of a problem but it is also a flat horizontal part, easy to work on. When trying to clean up the front wheel the chrome polish seemed to be doing the job but was taking a long time; the overspray was heavier than on the running board. Luckily it was only on half of the wheel, I’m guessing the tire cover was too short at the body shop.

Remembering a post that D300 was a good chrome cleaner I decided to give it a try to see if it would speed things up. Going back over the same area it did seem to brighten it up but it wasn’t any faster at polishing the next section. Once I had gotten the overspray off of about a quarter of the wheel I started using clay to remove the rest of it, that sped things up a little. This was taking more time than I wanted to spend and had only done one wheel and already had sore fingers. Remembering Forest had sent me a Powerball Mini to try, I got it and the drill out and gave it a shot on the same wheel with chrome polish. All I can say is wow this baby works, It really amped up the shine and depth of the chrome with very little effort. Moving to the rear wheel I was able to polish it start to finish in about ten minutes.

Backing up to the deep cleaning part of it. The truck only has 1700 miles on it and the wheels were coated with Opti Seal when I first got it which probably helped in releasing some of the overspray. I had clayed and polish the whole wheel by hand and could see no overspray or any brake dust residue on the wheel or clay which is white and was perfectly clean as far as any brake dust is concerned. Other than dust and water spots from sitting in the rain the wheels were exceptionally clean and only needed a wipe down with UWW before polishing. Armed with the PowerBall Mini I decided to start with the wheel I had just polished. To my surprise the PowerBall started turning a brownish color indicating it was cleaning brake dust out of the chrome that had just been polished by hand and the wheel really started shine like crazy and that is when the review started……….. Hopefully you’ve been able to endured my story and finally get to see what you really want to see and that are the pictures.

PowerBall Mini as you’ll find it at almost any auto parts or big box store.
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It comes with two attachments. The longer one has a plastic sleeve over the shaft so that the shaft can spin in your hand as you polish the surface. This is the one I used and it worked great. As you can see the longer one gives you 8” of reach and the solid one is 1 ¼” long.
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The shafts and connecting screw are fully cover by the foam so they won’t come in contact with the surface being polished.
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This was the condition of the wheel prior to polishing.There was no real concernable amount of dirt just normal dust and water spots, the truck was parked during the rain.
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MF towel after cleaning the wheel by hand with D300. A fair amount of brake dust residue was removed.
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This is the clay prior to using the Powerball Mini. By looking at the clay one would guess that the D300 had removed all of the brake dust residue.
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The foam on the PowerBall is going to tell a different story though there was still a fair amount of brake residue still on or embedded into the chrome. I'm so happy I did this as I will be coating them next week with Opti Coat.
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Clean up of the PowerBall couldn’t be easier. Once you take the shaft off of the foam head the attachment screw and plastic clip can be removed for washing. I used XMT pad cleaner to wash it out. All of the pictures of the PowerBall were actually taken after I had polished two wheels so you can see it cleans up nicely.
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Hope you enjoyed my review. As always questions comments welcomed.
 
Steve it sure is a time saver and does produce a much better shine than I was geting by hand.
 
Great to see this one coming around here, one great product that will help one and works. Thanks for sharing with us here.:bigups
 
Great review. I love my Powerball Mini. I use it all the time on the Torque Thrusts on my Nova...:bigups:bigups
 
I have one also and I've been very pleased with it. I really want to try a power cone but just haven't picked one up yet
 
Mothers makes some really good products and this is just another example.

Because of the price I was sort of reluctant shelling out $25 or so dollars but after I saw the results from using it $25.00 was money well spent.

This is an example of how well these 13 year old wheels restored...:bigups




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Nice review!! :bigups
 
Great to see this one coming around here, one great product that will help one and works. Thanks for sharing with us here.:bigups

Thanks yes it does.

Great review. I love my Powerball Mini. I use it all the time on the Torque Thrusts on my Nova...:bigups:bigups
I know I'll be using mine also.

Thanks for the review! Going to have to try one of these.
Mike you'll be thanking me after you use it.

I have one also and I've been very pleased with it. I really want to try a power cone but just haven't picked one up yet
I've got a Power Cone also and will be trying it for sure. Can't imagine its any less of a product.

Wow, your wheels look great!

Thanks Todd.

Mothers makes some really good products and this is just another example.

Because of the price I was sort of reluctant shelling out $25 or so dollars but after I saw the results from using it $25.00 was money well spent.

This is an example of how well these 13 year old wheels restored...:bigups
Nice review!! :bigups

Bobby I don't have to tell you it's more than worth the price of admission.:)
 
I use auto magics acid on chrome. I buy it by the drum. ALot qquicker and more effective then the powerball. Use it with a degreaser and the acid combo...best ever on chrome.
 
I use auto magics acid on chrome. I buy it by the drum. ALot qquicker and more effective then the powerball. Use it with a degreaser and the acid combo...best ever on chrome.

I think you may be missing the point of the post. I wasn't trying to do a normal cleaning, they had just been cleaned a day or so prior to being rained on and was not driven in the rain so the amount of dust and dirt was mininmal to begin with. I have numerous wheel cleaners for that, some acidic some not. I was trying to remove overspray, I don't know of a wheel cleaner that will do that, and if it does I don't think I want to use it on my wheels.

The post is more about the amount of embedded dirt and brake dust that chrome cleaner and clay by hand didn't remove. The pictures of the clay would clearly lead someone to believe that there was no dirt or brake dust there to be removed but in fact was there. As I said in the begining I wasn't planiing on doing a review of the PowerBall I was simply trying to find a way of saving some time and making the job easier but was shocked by the amount of dirt and brake dust the PowerBall removed on what looked to be a perfectly clean wheel.
 
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