Let's say the nickle/chrome plating on the brass is so far gone that it can't be restored.
Is there an easy way to remove the rest of if so that the bare brass can be polished and the part used that way?
Is it peeling or just discolored or pitting. If it's not peeling then there wouldn't be any need for concern as it's inside the reel & doesn't show. Then just clean it in the normal way and grease it. Ugly looking won't hurt preformance. ;D Rudy
On the older Penns that I have powder coated, the chrome over brass came off instantly in the sandblast booth using some pretty abrasive garnet. A good rough surface for powder coating. Not sure if is is the best option if you want polish it up.
Any idea which alloy Penn used in the brass parts?
-J
2nd the sand blasting. It has to be pretty aggressive and probably not a good choice if you want to re-chrome. Plater can strip but its expensive.
I use emery cloth. Unfortunately, time consuming but cheap. Depending on the shape of the part, the lathe can come in handy.
Here's a link of a reel I did and have done several since. Parts the weren't round were done by hand with emery and then polished with a brush and some compound on a dremel.
http://alantani.com/index.php?topic=21302.0
Hope this helps, .. Lou
Quote from: RowdyW on October 22, 2018, 04:36:35 PM
Ugly looking won't hurt preformance. ;D Rudy
Rudy, I'm trying hard not to make a joke at your expense. :D :D
Fine emory cloth will remove the plating
1500 and 2000 wet sanding, then a quick buff will get the results you described....PS, pitting may still be visible depending on how bad the pitting is
I'm with Rudy. The plating (or what's left of it) is there to reduce corrosion. Raw brass will tarnish just sitting on the shelf.
-steve
Thanks for the ideas guys! I'm going to play around with some things and see what happens :o
Lou, that reel gorgeous!