


I'm also trying to spend an hour a day on the fuchs, I'm having to hit them pretty hard with P60 due to the corrosion, i'm worried about losing some of the shape to the petals but i'm not sure what other option I have. -



Moderator: Bootsy






Its spaz stix ultimate chrome, Sprayed on with an airbrush. The secret is to do it in super light layers and build it up. I used a torch between layers to see if it shined through. As soon as it didn't I stopped as it can lose its chrome if you go too heavy. The rear lights have come out slightly less chrome as I sprayed the first layer on too heavy. I'm going to leave them for now and test some backer paints on them to protect the chrome. Much like the originals.Nige wrote:Good work, what was the chrome paint you used on the light lens.
I had wondered but I sent good pics to a couple of wheel refurbers and none seemed to think it was an issue. I'm no engineer but although they look bad they are only a fraction of a mm deep, this is their first refurb which obviously helps. Its annoying as they looked really good until the anodising was removed.jjeffries wrote:I'd urge great care with those Fuchs; seems like you'd have to go uncomfortably deep to get beyond those pock marks? Just urging caution from a strengty and safety perspective. John








PMNorris wrote:Very nice on the window frames. What are you sing to polish them with? Are you planning to have them bright anodised again when you have finished polishing?
Lenses look great too. I did mine a couple of years ago and then bought a lens polishing kit to do the fronts. They came out really well. I should had lacquered them though, which I will do at some point as they are not quite as shiny as they were.
Paul
If I may say I don't think "wheel refurbers" are a good test of what is appropriate. Such people are principally interested in making a wheel aesthetically attractive. Whilst they should have an eye on safety: if a wheel fails there is always "what do you expect from a 40 year old wheel".8bit-ash wrote:I had wondered but I sent good pics to a couple of wheel refurbers and none seemed to think it was an issue. I'm no engineer but although they look bad they are only a fraction of a mm deep, this is their first refurb which obviously helps. Its annoying as they looked really good until the anodising was removed.jjeffries wrote:I'd urge great care with those Fuchs; seems like you'd have to go uncomfortably deep to get beyond those pock marks? Just urging caution from a strengty and safety perspective. John
I've used your advise from another thread and have found someone who is cutting it back by eye to ensure only the minimal amount is taken off. They are then measuring the thickness in multiple places for me to ensure its still within limits. The one pictured is the worst one by far, the others are all much less severe, I might find that that one needs replacing but we'll see what the engineer comes back with. The spare wheel was virtually pit free which suggests the pitting is caused by the environment and the petals have all cleaned up fine after sanding so I don't think there are any issues with the manufacturing. My mentioning of the wheel refurbers was mainly because it suggests the level of pitting isn't unusual for a stripped fuch. When the anodising was still on you really wouldn't have known that they were pitted at all.BILLY BEAN wrote:If I may say I don't think "wheel refurbers" are a good test of what is appropriate. Such people are principally interested in making a wheel aesthetically attractive. Whilst they should have an eye on safety: if a wheel fails there is always "what do you expect from a 40 year old wheel".8bit-ash wrote:I had wondered but I sent good pics to a couple of wheel refurbers and none seemed to think it was an issue. I'm no engineer but although they look bad they are only a fraction of a mm deep, this is their first refurb which obviously helps. Its annoying as they looked really good until the anodising was removed.jjeffries wrote:I'd urge great care with those Fuchs; seems like you'd have to go uncomfortably deep to get beyond those pock marks? Just urging caution from a strengty and safety perspective. John
As for the pitting in your wheel: not all pitting is a result of external forces. Some pitting can be "faults" in the material and may penetrate deep into the forging.