Removing colored anodizing from aluminum parts is easy. A 15 minute bath in Greased Lightening and you have a silver part. After the color is gone would the part be susceptable to corrotion? If so, is there a means of protecting it without adding color? I am just curious because I want to make a relatively expensive gold part turn silver. Cheers! J
Jason ,
If you do remove the anodizing it will allow the salt air to corrode the aluminum , the anodizing if done right will stop the air from getting to the aluminum , try some different searches on line for a clear coat of some sort , just rememebr what ever you end up putting on there watch for buildup of that material these reels are built to close tolerences as you know . Good Luck !!
Dave
Aluminum oxidizes extremely fast and removal of the protective coating is not a good idea, powder coating will protect the metal if you have to remove the anodizing.
And. Powder coat comes in clear as well.
If it's an expensive part, have it silver anodised professionally and it will be a joy to behold. ;)
If you find a place to anodize the spool, please let me know. I want a frame to get re-anodized in silver, include the reel seat.
Quote from: Bryan Young on June 12, 2012, 03:47:17 PM
If you find a place to anodize the spool, please let me know. I want a frame to get re-anodized in silver, include the reel seat.
There is an anodizing shop in Albany, OR that has done good work for my brother at fairly reasonable price. I have to be in Eugene to watch my youngest daughter graduate on Monday, do you want me to see if they can do a reel frame in silver
Please. they may need to strip the existing anodization.
Actually, I don't really care what color it is, so if they want to stick it in a color that they are already anodizing, that would be cool. If that is the case, I'll send the frame, star, handle arm and reel seat.
If it's a cool color, like blue, I may send more...lol
Bryan
Wait until I talk to the owner, It's been 6 or so years and I'm not real sure they are still in buisness. Albany is between Eugene and Monmoth and we plan on staying at my son's place there.
If you buff up aluminum to shine like chrome, it will not corrode. Of course you have to wash off the salt after exposure. Dominick
exposed alumimum will form a micro thin layer of aluminum oxide that is supposed to protect the actual aluminum, which is hard and tough (like your aluminum oxide fishing guides). The problem is when there's salt...
Quote from: Irish Jigger on June 12, 2012, 03:31:55 PM
If it's an expensive part, have it silver anodised professionally and it will be a joy to behold. ;)
That would be ideal, but I cannot find an anodizer to do such a small job. It is not that the part is that expensive, i paid $125, it is that they are hard to find. It is a 9/0 Accuframe that is gold.
Try Boeshield,just what it`s developed for.
buzz
Quote from: Buzz on June 12, 2012, 09:31:02 PM
Try Boeshield,just what it`s developed for.
buzz
Boeshield is good stuff for aluminum, Developed by Boeing Aircraft for protection on aluminum parts in thier airliners, I live close to the ocean and I always used it on my aluminum sliding glass doors and tracks, kept them sliding and corrosion free for years..Dan