Painting new calipers
9 posts
• Page 1 of 1
I'm fitting new plated calipers and I want a painted finish rather than the 'Silver look' that will tarnish soon enough.
I've tried Hammerite but that doesn't seem to stick too well to the plating. Any idea's/recommendations please?
thanks
Mike
I've tried Hammerite but that doesn't seem to stick too well to the plating. Any idea's/recommendations please?
thanks
Mike
- mikealdren
- Coveted Fifth Gear
- Posts: 1194
- Joined: 26 Aug 2006
Just in the last few days I tried the E-tech caliper paint (eg https://www.amazon.co.uk/SILVER-Caliper ... iper+paint).
I didn't have time to do an in-depth refurbishment - that is get them dipped/stripped and plated - so I brushed off the corrosion and stripped the old paint (it dissolved with carb cleaner) and just wanted a coating that would prevent further corrosion.
It has the consistency of smooth Hammerite so it's quite sticky to apply, and when applying it it seems to be difficult to get a uniform finish because the final appearance seems to be sensitive to the direction of the brush strokes. Coverage was ok - I did one coat everywhere, and then a second coat on the exposed parts. In the end, the final appearance was better than expected but still not the flat finish you'd expect from conventional paint. I can post a photo if you're interested.
Adhesion didn't seem to be a problem, but the plating on mine was long-since tarnished, or gone completely, so that will probably have provided more of a key than a fresh plated finish.
It took a long time to dry. Like Hammerite, it was mostly dry (just slightly tacky) after about 45 minutes, but then it remained slightly sticky for a few days despite being in the airing cupboard.
It's not the same stuff as Hammerite, because I tried cleaning the brush with Hammerite thinners, and it all congealed. Cellulose thinners (as they suggest) worked fine.
I don't know how durable it is yet, obviously.
Overall conclusion: simple and effective but, in terms of the final appearance, but I think you'd get a better result with a more conventional enamel, especially if you're starting off from a pristine state.
Edit: I've still got 90% of the tin if you want yours silver
Paddy
I didn't have time to do an in-depth refurbishment - that is get them dipped/stripped and plated - so I brushed off the corrosion and stripped the old paint (it dissolved with carb cleaner) and just wanted a coating that would prevent further corrosion.
It has the consistency of smooth Hammerite so it's quite sticky to apply, and when applying it it seems to be difficult to get a uniform finish because the final appearance seems to be sensitive to the direction of the brush strokes. Coverage was ok - I did one coat everywhere, and then a second coat on the exposed parts. In the end, the final appearance was better than expected but still not the flat finish you'd expect from conventional paint. I can post a photo if you're interested.
Adhesion didn't seem to be a problem, but the plating on mine was long-since tarnished, or gone completely, so that will probably have provided more of a key than a fresh plated finish.
It took a long time to dry. Like Hammerite, it was mostly dry (just slightly tacky) after about 45 minutes, but then it remained slightly sticky for a few days despite being in the airing cupboard.
It's not the same stuff as Hammerite, because I tried cleaning the brush with Hammerite thinners, and it all congealed. Cellulose thinners (as they suggest) worked fine.
I don't know how durable it is yet, obviously.
Overall conclusion: simple and effective but, in terms of the final appearance, but I think you'd get a better result with a more conventional enamel, especially if you're starting off from a pristine state.
Edit: I've still got 90% of the tin if you want yours silver
Paddy
1963 Elan S1
-
paddy - Coveted Fifth Gear
- Posts: 1036
- Joined: 27 Oct 2008
Thanks both, my calipers are already (zinc?) coated but I want coloured finish. The Hammerite wouldn't stick to the new plated finish and that's my challenge.
I've used various caliper paints before on old calipers in the past, it's the new finish that's the issue. I know that zinc finish can be problematic and cadmium primers are recommended but I'd really like a single coat finish that will stand the heat and the abuse from road muck and wet.
I've used various caliper paints before on old calipers in the past, it's the new finish that's the issue. I know that zinc finish can be problematic and cadmium primers are recommended but I'd really like a single coat finish that will stand the heat and the abuse from road muck and wet.
- mikealdren
- Coveted Fifth Gear
- Posts: 1194
- Joined: 26 Aug 2006
I have used this product successfully in the past:
https://www.demon-tweeks.com/uk/foliate ... er-243118/
Regards
John
https://www.demon-tweeks.com/uk/foliate ... er-243118/
Regards
John
-
c42 - Third Gear
- Posts: 312
- Joined: 10 Sep 2009
I've now scraped the Hammerite off one of the calipers, it flaked off very easily, not good.
The Foliate sounds good, two packs do tend to stick well and I'm sure it's good on older calipers.
Has anyone painted new, plated calipers???
The Foliate sounds good, two packs do tend to stick well and I'm sure it's good on older calipers.
Has anyone painted new, plated calipers???
- mikealdren
- Coveted Fifth Gear
- Posts: 1194
- Joined: 26 Aug 2006
I once used Hammerite clear lacquer on a set of newly plated calipers to prevent them dulling. It's not like Hammerite paint - it sets properly IIRC. Anyway.. the calipers looked great after a year so I concluded it was a good decision. Brush painted too.
-
JonB - Coveted Fifth Gear
- Posts: 2359
- Joined: 14 Nov 2017
9 posts
• Page 1 of 1
Total Online:
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 28 guests