The wheels were pretty crusty on my '73 CB500 - rims were nicked (like someone used a crowbar and a running start to mount the tires), faded, scratched... hubs were corroded, yellowed... spokes were chalky, rusty... So, I degreased and degreased... polished (did nothing) Scotch-Brite'd (did nothing)... They were beyond saving - cosmetically. I have another set of O.E. hubs - these will be used to build a new set of wheels - new spokes and rims.
Until I can build the new wheels, the old ones are getting some paint.
This is after a lot of cleaning:
This is after a whole lot of prep - sanding, sanding and sanding... then 3 light coats of metal etching primer and 4 coats of satin black - perfect conditions, e.g. 72 degrees, low humidity - 6-8 minutes between coats of primer; waited 30 minutes for the first coat of the black - then 8-10 min. between coats... light/moderate coats:
Next day - One coat of clear... same brand (Rustoleum) all three are enamel. Conditions still ideal:
The clear essentially acted as a paint stripper - everywhere it touched the base/black, it wrinkled and wiped off. I spent some time on the phone this morning with a tech at Rustoleum. My mistake was not letting those 4 coats of satin black dry... cure... harden - before applying the clear. The tech recommended 48 hours - not the 24-28 I waited. That recommended drying time is on the satin black (in .0005 font) but it is NOT on the clear.
I re-sanded the wheel - about half of the paint was ruined. Some of the black is good. Some was taken down to the primer and some to bare metal.
Next warning: Metal-etching primer can't be used over paint. It is ONLY for bare metal. I know, that's sort of obvious. But, having a wheel with some paint, some bare metal did beg the question - what now? There is a "universal bonding" primer that can be used over paint and metal. That's next.