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Letter 1476
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Ken Lemke |
I am interested in opening a chrome refinishing business, would greatly appreciate information pertaining to the process of refinishing metals and the codes/regulations, etc,covering the process/safety requirements in Tennessee. But would be interested in your requirements.
Kathleen Garcia
I would like to know if there is another way to safely remove chrome from golf clubs without using toxic chemicals? The materials the golf clubs are made of are carbon steel.
Nial Miyata - Nial's Golf Repair
The two possible approaches are blasting and chemical stripping, and neither is non-toxic. Even if you were to remove the chrome, Nial, there is nickel underneath it, which is harder to remove. The plating industry is very heavily jobshop oriented, and I'm sure there are nearby shops who would be happy to do this portion of the repair for you with all needed dispatch.
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I would like to know if there are any ways to paint over a chrome plated surface.
What are the base coats available and what are the preparation that I have to do before painting.
Max Liang
- Singapore
See "Studies of Paint Adhesion on Chromium Surfaces" by K.H. Hasmanis, Metal Finishing Nov. 76.
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Ted Mooney finishing.com Brick, New Jersey |
I have bicyle wheels that are rusty. I would like to remove the
chrome and paint them black.
This is a low budget fix so going to a plater is not an option.
How do I remove the chrome so the primer will adhere to the carbon
steel?
Kate S.
- Melbourne, VIC, Australia
Hi, Kate. Maybe you can find painted replacement wheels on ebay or some similar place? Having a tight budget won't justify an environmentally questionable approach, so be careful of disposal. Muriatic Acid [link is to product info at Amazon] will remove chrome, but not the nickel underneath the chrome, but maybe a Self-Etching Primer [link is to product info at Amazon] will get sufficient bite on the nickel. Acid is for those who fuly understand it and have good personnel protection equipment (remember that no employer would let you near muriatic acid until you had received hands-on training).
Regards,
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Ted Mooney finishing.com Brick, New Jersey |

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