Support the site. Your contributions keep this site running.
0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.
Sorry Havoc,Aluminum is very reactive with the first solution, It dissolves it and creates hydrogen gas, also sulfuric and hydrochloric acid will dissolve the aluminum so I don't think it would be a good idea to use my solution for plating valve covers as it has to be in the first solution for about 30 minutes and the second for about 3 hours. There would be nothing left to call a valve cover. But your local plating shop could probably do that, they have all the closely guarded secrets.//www.youtube.com/watch?v=Y7FmrOatEEAAluminum in a caustic soda (lye) solution, this is the first bath I would use to plate steel or nickle.Lye reacts with, Aluminum Magnesium Zinc Tin Chromium Brass BronzeTo create hydrogen, in the process it dissolves the metal. Some it takes longer then others, the electricity speeds up the process.
So Krixxer gave me a list of stuff to try, some of which I am not capable of at this time and some that I was. So thanks to some great advice from Krixxer (Thanks), here is the end result on the clubmans. And to think I was on the brink of givving up on the copper plating until winter comes again..... patiance I just needed some patiance and to give it another try.
By trying to make yourself sound intelligent you appear to be #$%*in stupid......
Yeah! There's supposed to be copper under the nickle and the exposed steel is supposed to be platable. After about an hour and a half the caps were nicely plated but the tubes were grey, corroded an a lot smaller then the are supposed to be. Where the mickle stayed on the tubes there was a deep ridge and deep pits. It also looks like my solution is contaminated.
Sweet, bubbly, Buddha - Say it ain't so!!!
just in case anyone cared...