- 1. Removing Bad Chrome Plate (score: 1)
- Author: Derek Harling <derek.lola@sympatico.ca>
- Date: Tue, 07 Sep 1999 22:30:50 -0400
- Need help/advice. I have some unique suspension nuts etc on a race car I'm renovating that are/were chrome plated but the plating is flaking off. At least I assume it it is Chrome plating. I've tried
- /html/shop-talk/1999-09/msg00015.html (7,233 bytes)
- 2. Re: Removing Bad Chrome Plate (score: 1)
- Author: Duncan120@aol.com
- Date: Tue, 7 Sep 1999 22:52:38 EDT
- << Is there a safe chemical way to remove it? >> Bring it to a plater and they will dip it and it will come right off. Blasting is absolutely the wrong way to do it. It only pounds the nickel and or
- /html/shop-talk/1999-09/msg00017.html (7,344 bytes)
- 3. Re: Removing Bad Chrome Plate (score: 1)
- Author: Douglas Shook <shook@usc.edu>
- Date: Tue, 07 Sep 1999 20:27:26 -0700
- There was just some discussion on another group about using muriatic acid and water bath for this purpose (I don't know the ratio, though). There also was a comment about taking it to a chromer to ha
- /html/shop-talk/1999-09/msg00020.html (7,649 bytes)
- 4. Re: Removing Bad Chrome Plate (score: 1)
- Author: cak@dimebank.com (Chris Kantarjiev)
- Date: Tue, 7 Sep 1999 21:04:03 -0700
- The old traditional plating was gold cad or nickel...
- /html/shop-talk/1999-09/msg00021.html (6,648 bytes)
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