painting brake calipers
#16
Just throwing out an idea here guys,
but as soon as i put my 22s on when the weather gets better, the first thing im doing is taking my die grinder to the calipers before i bolt the wheels on.
if im not mistaken they are aluminum.. ( i havent really checked yet) but it looks like it from the pics posted
polished aluminum calipers will look hella sick.
ill post pics when i do them.
but as soon as i put my 22s on when the weather gets better, the first thing im doing is taking my die grinder to the calipers before i bolt the wheels on.
if im not mistaken they are aluminum.. ( i havent really checked yet) but it looks like it from the pics posted
polished aluminum calipers will look hella sick.
ill post pics when i do them.
#18
Originally Posted by F150_B.F.D.M.
is that how u polish *****.. is by doin that?
ype, polished aluminum is basically very very finely sanded aluminum.
I will use the die to get it semi smooth, as it has a rough texture. then swap out to a fexible sander disc.
then just progressively sand till you hit the 1200+ grits
then a nice metal polish ( i use mothers) to polish the hell out of it.
Since these are calipers im going to polish the crap out of them then hit them with clear coat wheel/caliper paint to keep them "blingy" and protected. A nice wax coat will help too.
looks just like chrome, works real well when billet grilles get grungy and dirty too. ive done mine once already, and i also bought a "brushed" billet for my sisters ranger and polished it myself, hell i saved the extra 60 bucks they wanted for the polished grille.
#21
#22
Originally Posted by keltic
My calipers:
I have also added Stainless Steel braided brake lines on it (right side, seems like there is a difference on abs/no abs truck.... )
BTW: Salty roads here in Norway!
I have also added Stainless Steel braided brake lines on it (right side, seems like there is a difference on abs/no abs truck.... )
BTW: Salty roads here in Norway!
#24
Originally Posted by Fabian06SC
Just throwing out an idea here guys,
but as soon as i put my 22s on when the weather gets better, the first thing im doing is taking my die grinder to the calipers before i bolt the wheels on.
if im not mistaken they are aluminum..
but as soon as i put my 22s on when the weather gets better, the first thing im doing is taking my die grinder to the calipers before i bolt the wheels on.
if im not mistaken they are aluminum..
#25
Originally Posted by Rousher17
Cast Aluminum???? I don't think so. I've never even heard of aluminum calipers. I believe ALL calipers are cast iron.
Yea our trucks dont have aluminum calipers, i just saw one of the pics and it seemed they may be aluminum. After i installed my wheels i noticed they were iron.
And not ALL calipers are cast iron, third gen camaros had rear cast aluminum calipers and there are plenty of billet aluminum higher end performance calipers
#26
As i said, i polished one side today. Cast Iron polishes too just as most metals will. Took about 2 hours start to finish,
Heres some pics.
Here is the rotor and caliper with my favorite tool at about 5:45 when i got home from work. Die grinders make scuffing down ugly sand casting marks a breeze.
Here it is after about 5 min of quick grinds using a heaver stone. notice the shine is already visible.
another shot, the pits are still visible here, we got a bit to go
and a bit more after i changed out to a softer smoother stone
Heres some pics.
Here is the rotor and caliper with my favorite tool at about 5:45 when i got home from work. Die grinders make scuffing down ugly sand casting marks a breeze.
Here it is after about 5 min of quick grinds using a heaver stone. notice the shine is already visible.
another shot, the pits are still visible here, we got a bit to go
and a bit more after i changed out to a softer smoother stone
#27
did a little more detailing with the soft stone
then i knocked it smooth with 220 grit on a small sander
The shine is really starting to be evident, you can see the reflection here
But there is still some pitting left.
I went a few more rounds with 220 then switch up to 400
you can really see how great it looks here.
then i knocked it smooth with 220 grit on a small sander
The shine is really starting to be evident, you can see the reflection here
But there is still some pitting left.
I went a few more rounds with 220 then switch up to 400
you can really see how great it looks here.
#28
it gets dark here at about 620 or so, thats why the pics start getting darker, i had to keep holding somthing up to the surface to get the reflection on camera. heres a pic of one of my chrome lugs that was sitting there.
Here is a full shot of the caliper pretty much ready to go.
I then took some high heat engine paint (ford dark blue) and painted the surrounding areas
I then sprayed a quick coat of some clear i had laying around. this is just to seal the shine till this weekend when i get some high heat clear. you can see how it resembles chrome in this shot
Here is a full shot of the caliper pretty much ready to go.
I then took some high heat engine paint (ford dark blue) and painted the surrounding areas
I then sprayed a quick coat of some clear i had laying around. this is just to seal the shine till this weekend when i get some high heat clear. you can see how it resembles chrome in this shot
#29
heres a nice shot of the wheel spinning, you can clearly see the shining caliper inside, and this was taken with no flash and no droplights, just our halogen overhead light a few yards away.
Not bad for 4 bucks worth of paint and some elbow grease huh?
The calipers damn near resemble chrome plating, and they are OEM and i did it all (including removal and reinstall of wheel) in about 2hrs.
i am going to mention that this was mainly to see what results i got, and it is my daily so i couldnt put it out of comission by taking the caliper off and doing the whole thing. I only got to 400 girt, and i really did the die grinding to quick and left too many scuffs with it. I will do them right this weekend and get to a higher grit, and use the metal polish.
I used some krylon clear just to keep if from getting surface rust till this weekend when i can really take everything apart and polished/painted up real nice. Oh i also threw a little metalflake so the rotors matched my truck a little better.
Not bad for 4 bucks worth of paint and some elbow grease huh?
The calipers damn near resemble chrome plating, and they are OEM and i did it all (including removal and reinstall of wheel) in about 2hrs.
i am going to mention that this was mainly to see what results i got, and it is my daily so i couldnt put it out of comission by taking the caliper off and doing the whole thing. I only got to 400 girt, and i really did the die grinding to quick and left too many scuffs with it. I will do them right this weekend and get to a higher grit, and use the metal polish.
I used some krylon clear just to keep if from getting surface rust till this weekend when i can really take everything apart and polished/painted up real nice. Oh i also threw a little metalflake so the rotors matched my truck a little better.
#30
Originally Posted by Fabian06SC
heres a nice shot of the wheel spinning, you can clearly see the shining caliper inside, and this was taken with no flash and no droplights, just our halogen overhead light a few yards away.
Not bad for 4 bucks worth of paint and some elbow grease huh?
The calipers damn near resemble chrome plating, and they are OEM and i did it all (including removal and reinstall of wheel) in about 2hrs.
i am going to mention that this was mainly to see what results i got, and it is my daily so i couldnt put it out of comission by taking the caliper off and doing the whole thing. I only got to 400 girt, and i really did the die grinding to quick and left too many scuffs with it. I will do them right this weekend and get to a higher grit, and use the metal polish.
I used some krylon clear just to keep if from getting surface rust till this weekend when i can really take everything apart and polished/painted up real nice. Oh i also threw a little metalflake so the rotors matched my truck a little better.
Not bad for 4 bucks worth of paint and some elbow grease huh?
The calipers damn near resemble chrome plating, and they are OEM and i did it all (including removal and reinstall of wheel) in about 2hrs.
i am going to mention that this was mainly to see what results i got, and it is my daily so i couldnt put it out of comission by taking the caliper off and doing the whole thing. I only got to 400 girt, and i really did the die grinding to quick and left too many scuffs with it. I will do them right this weekend and get to a higher grit, and use the metal polish.
I used some krylon clear just to keep if from getting surface rust till this weekend when i can really take everything apart and polished/painted up real nice. Oh i also threw a little metalflake so the rotors matched my truck a little better.