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Registered
Join Date: Jun 2001
Location: Central Florida
Posts: 1,409
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Replating of Calipers...
I've got my caliper halves sandblasted and am now looking at finish.
I'd love to get them Cadmium plated to appear original. Also, if plated, do the bores and passages get plated too? I don't see a way NOT to replate the bores as the entire piece is submerged in the plating tank. Also, would replating affect piston fit if the plating got in the bores? Thanks,
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Qarl |
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Administrator
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You do not want to plate the bores, as it will change the dimension of the bore. The plating can also flake off, which is bad news for your brakes. You can mask off the bores in a similar (but not the same) way as when painting.
Diitto all of the sealing surfaces of the caliper half. --DD
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Pelican Parts 914 Tech Support A few pics of my car: http://www.pelicanparts.com/gallery/Dave_Darling |
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Join Date: Jan 2002
Location: Long Beach CA, the sewer by the sea.
Posts: 37,702
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Yes, the platers can direct the plating to wanted surfaces and prevent plating from goint to machined surfaces as DD said. They do this w/ bolt threads all the time. I've seen plain ol' masking tape used.
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Join Date: Oct 2001
Location: new bern, nc
Posts: 418
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karl, please let me know if you find someone that does the cad plating. noone over here does it.
doug
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doug waters 70 914-6 dougwatersfotos.com http://www.flickr.com/photos/dougwatersfotos/ |
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Join Date: Oct 1999
Location: San Ramon, CA
Posts: 1,207
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Was the original finish cad plated?
All original calipers I have seen have been raw cast iron. |
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Here's what mine look like. My 911 has never been touched and they are cad plated as well - but not as shiney...
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- A pile of British stuff - A growing pile of German stuff ... oh, and two Hondas - complete with car seats and pounds of fish crackers smashed into the carpet (and seats, and door pockets, etc etc etc....) |
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Join Date: Dec 2001
Location: Georgetown, MA
Posts: 137
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I'd love to hear how you make out. I had no luck finding a local cadmium plater last year when I split and sandblasted a bunch of calipers, and was also wondering about plating or masking of the inerts. I also looked into some of the home plating kits (none found with cadmium) and Eastwoods multi-step pseudo-cad rattle can products, amongst others. I ended up using a tiny can of silver por (plenty left over) on my 914 calipers, but still have a set of 914-6 calipers (part of 5-lug setup) that I'd like to have cad plated.
Ed PS I wish I had treated/painted the hardware cause it's rusting all over my shiney calipers!
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'74 914 V8 '70 914 |
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I had my calipers done in cad and then black passivated bright zinc which results in a satin charcoal colour. Its great because it stands up to brake fluid and doesn't chip. The reason for the cad first is so that the zinc will stick.
Howie |
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Alternately you could paint them. Pelican has a 2 part paint that looks really shiny. I used it on the calipers on my "other baby"... but I don't know how well the paint holds up in actual use since the other car's not driveable yet.
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Ken 1974 Porsche 914 2.0 "Babydoll" |
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Join Date: Jun 2002
Location: Reisterstown,Md
Posts: 57
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Check out www.goldlinebrakes.com and there polymer coated brakes. I'm having a set rebuilt & polymer coated red. Should get them back latter next week sometime. Good price on rebuilds & nice people to deal with.
Ralph 74 2.0 |
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