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Need help painting polished wheels....


CrateCruncher
08-22-2009, 02:23 PM
OK, I'm elbow deep in this Hiro Testa Rossa and it has the most gorgeous polished aluminum rims and stainless steel photo-etch wheels. Just one problem: the TR I'm doing has silver painted wheels. Ugh! I plan to scuff and paint the parts before assembly but not sure what primer and paint I should use. Hep me! hep me!:confused:

koksik
08-22-2009, 03:10 PM
Alclad polishing aluminium paint

935k3
08-22-2009, 03:41 PM
You can prep the wheels and scuff them by using a toothbrush and some SoftScrub cleaner(a mild abrasive), sold in the kitchen cleaning section of supermarket. Then get some Duplicolor Self-Etching Primer, sold at most auto part stores. Then apply regular primer over that.

360spider
08-22-2009, 05:13 PM
Tamiya Metal primer, or any other etching primer.
These primers contain a fair amount of acid that etches into metal (you can't really see it, it is smooth), and gives primer a tooth to hold on to metal.
http://www.hobbylinc.com/htm/tam/tam87061.htm

CrateCruncher
08-22-2009, 05:23 PM
Thanks guys. The Duplicolor should be easy to locate around here. I'll give that a try first and report how it goes.

Didymus
08-22-2009, 08:06 PM
Next to polished white metal, my favorite aluminum these days is Tamiya AS-12 Bare Metal Silver. Compared to glossy aluminum, it's a thinner coating with less of a dipped-in-paint appearance. It looks lighter and more in scale. To my eyes, it's just right for aluminum wheels and suspension parts.

Ddms

CrateCruncher
08-22-2009, 10:20 PM
Thanks for that info on AS-12 Didymus. I did a test with TS-17 gloss aluminum and it's too shiney. I'm looking for a matte silver grey with no discernable flake. I'm also really concerned about paint buildup and not being able to assemble my wheels so thin is GOOD.

I also thought about X-11 airbrushed really thin but haven't tried it. It needs to be fairly durable too. Wheels do get scraped and knocked about when transporting.

360spider
08-22-2009, 11:19 PM
Put the wheels together, then paint.

CrateCruncher
08-23-2009, 11:54 AM
Well that would be a lot easier for sure. My concern with painting after wheel assembly is getting adequate coverage toward the interior of the wheel through all the spokes (6 layers!) without laying on too much material on the outer layers. I tried painting a 2.5" 1/8 Pocher Alfa wheel after assembly and had that problem a few years ago. My airbrush isn't great (kinda matched to the operator:smooch:) so I don't want to set myself up for that again! Theres probably a compromise between the two extremes by simply painting the interior parts before assembly.

BVC500
08-23-2009, 04:49 PM
Doesn't allclad make a matt aluminum finish?

CrateCruncher
08-23-2009, 05:15 PM
I guess I should have posted a picture of what I want to achieve in the original post. Sorry.
http://i419.photobucket.com/albums/pp280/cratecruncher/Ferrari%20Testa%20Rossa/140S.jpg
It's not a great picture but it's clearly dull silver paint. The wheels in the kit are machined, then polished, aluminum and they look beautiful but unfortunately their all wrong for my car. So I'm doing the unthinkable: painting polished aluminum wheels with matte silver paint (yes, I've lost it!). BTW, I found some Tamiya Metal Primer at my LHS today. I never noticed it before today.

360spider
08-23-2009, 07:34 PM
I've done it before (painting the wheels after assembly) and it wasn't a problem.

CrateCruncher
08-23-2009, 07:41 PM
I'll give it a go then. Thanks Alex!

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