First, I must say - patina lovers - cover your eyes! You may find this painful!
I have an old Kingston 22in ride (MIJ) that I am in the beginning stages of cleaning. This cymbal probably has not been cleaned - EVER - and I am trying to brighten it up and add sustain - and yes, I love clean shiny cymbals.
So far, only in the spot shown and also some on the bottom as a test, I have used ketchup to get the bulk of it off, then Zildjian's cream in the tube cleaner (white tube, black label) - yes, this is a pretty old tube of cleaner that I had for years before using recently ("Professional Cymbal Cleaning Cream").
Now, notice that there is alot of built up dark, thick, stubborn patina deep in these grooves. In the spot that you see there - after the ketchup has done its thing, I am left with some patina still in the grooves and it is quite difficult to get that cleaned up.
Question is - is this the best (and most affordable) way to do this. I am on a tight budget. Groove Juice comes to mind, but does it work on this thick of patina, and I have also heard that it sometimes changes the COLOR of the cymbal. No - don't know what this cymbal is made of (composition). I am very happy with the result of the Zildjian cleaner - though it is a messy process requiring much elbow grease. The end shine/polish is beautiful.
I DO have a bottle of Kick 'n Brass - somewhere around here - but have seen it change color of cymbals.
Please do not let this turn into a debate about clean vs. dirty ; patina vs. brilliant shine ; etc.
I have read up on several threads, but find this difficult to soak (it's big! 22inches) - though I would consider soaking if I could do half of it at a time with no ill visual affects. NOTE: Yes, I already have soaked/cleaned this in Dawn and H20. The white stuff you see on there is something like chalk or paint or something.
Thanks for any advice,
John