The DIY of Bling - as promised in the for sale section
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- Uncle Arthur
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The DIY of Bling - as promised in the for sale section
For anyone who wants to polish - it's easy.
Start with the object you want polished - AFM, rocker cover, turbo housing......
Seeing as there's lots of alloy under the bonnet of the 5, there's plenty to choose from.....
Start with the skanky old bit of metal you want shiny..... eg. turbo:
The first process is sanding - anywhere from a 400 grit to an 800 grit is fine - you want to take all the cast marks and remove the 'burry' surface. You can use the dry paper to start but a cheap car polish also works very well as the cutting paste - it mixes with the microfine metal sandings and makes an even better and smoother abrasive. If you dont want to sand by hand, a mouse (detail) sander works very well.
This rocker cover shows a half and half stage - I've polished one side using the method I'll describe below, and the other half is just at the sanding stage.
Once you have the metal surface 'smooth' you need to start to buff out the sanding scratches - you do it exactly the same way as you would polishing the paintwork. A cheap polishing kit from the hardware is a good investment and makes the job easier. Apply polishing paste to the polishing wheel (ragmop) or to a soft rag, and start polishing..... it is hard work, and you need to keep at it, but it will shine up.
I took this turbo from the pic above to this below:
And here's the rocker cover end - it was just as you see it on the car from the factory:
You can also use a ragmop attached to a bench grinder - this is how most workshops will do it - I have and use both, depending on the details I'm after.
There's a few here who have successfully blinged their cars - perhaps a few others can add their $0.02 here.......
Start with the object you want polished - AFM, rocker cover, turbo housing......
Seeing as there's lots of alloy under the bonnet of the 5, there's plenty to choose from.....
Start with the skanky old bit of metal you want shiny..... eg. turbo:
The first process is sanding - anywhere from a 400 grit to an 800 grit is fine - you want to take all the cast marks and remove the 'burry' surface. You can use the dry paper to start but a cheap car polish also works very well as the cutting paste - it mixes with the microfine metal sandings and makes an even better and smoother abrasive. If you dont want to sand by hand, a mouse (detail) sander works very well.
This rocker cover shows a half and half stage - I've polished one side using the method I'll describe below, and the other half is just at the sanding stage.
Once you have the metal surface 'smooth' you need to start to buff out the sanding scratches - you do it exactly the same way as you would polishing the paintwork. A cheap polishing kit from the hardware is a good investment and makes the job easier. Apply polishing paste to the polishing wheel (ragmop) or to a soft rag, and start polishing..... it is hard work, and you need to keep at it, but it will shine up.
I took this turbo from the pic above to this below:
And here's the rocker cover end - it was just as you see it on the car from the factory:
You can also use a ragmop attached to a bench grinder - this is how most workshops will do it - I have and use both, depending on the details I'm after.
There's a few here who have successfully blinged their cars - perhaps a few others can add their $0.02 here.......
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- Uncle Arthur
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About $30-$50 - but get the highest wattage version they have - mine is a 250W (I think???), and it could really do with some extra grunt for proper polishing work. Aim for about 350W I think.....
Bunnings, Supercheap - any of the above.
Bunnings, Supercheap - any of the above.
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ok.. so got up nice and early today.. HA 10:30
went down to bunning asking about that power tool.. they said they dont have it.. so i went to super cheap.. same deal..
what is it a am asking for exactly?..
so i ended up getting some 400 wet n dry and started to do it by hand.. below is a photo taken after 20 mins of hard work lol
is there a better way to do this or does this seem ok?..
and what exactly is the power tool needed for... is that to get the marks off after.. am i fine to keep using the 400 grit until the whole cover looks like the left side
Cheers
Ajay
went down to bunning asking about that power tool.. they said they dont have it.. so i went to super cheap.. same deal..
what is it a am asking for exactly?..
so i ended up getting some 400 wet n dry and started to do it by hand.. below is a photo taken after 20 mins of hard work lol
is there a better way to do this or does this seem ok?..
and what exactly is the power tool needed for... is that to get the marks off after.. am i fine to keep using the 400 grit until the whole cover looks like the left side
Cheers
Ajay
- Ajay
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We use pork fat to polish alloy here at work....
2001 Mazda MX-5 NB8B- http://www.mx5cartalk.com/forum/viewtopic.php?f=57&t=61506
Past:
2005 Mazda MX-5 SE
1991 Mazda MX-5 NA6
Past:
2005 Mazda MX-5 SE
1991 Mazda MX-5 NA6
- Astroboysoup
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Re:
PT wrote:We use pork fat to polish alloy here at work....
you serious?
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Certainly am....
and canola oil when sanding...
I swear to god, the honest truth.
and canola oil when sanding...
I swear to god, the honest truth.
2001 Mazda MX-5 NB8B- http://www.mx5cartalk.com/forum/viewtopic.php?f=57&t=61506
Past:
2005 Mazda MX-5 SE
1991 Mazda MX-5 NA6
Past:
2005 Mazda MX-5 SE
1991 Mazda MX-5 NA6
- Uncle Arthur
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Re:
mx5_boy wrote:ok.. so got up nice and early today.. HA 10:30
went down to bunning asking about that power tool.. they said they dont have it.. so i went to super cheap.. same deal..
what is it a am asking for exactly?..
so i ended up getting some 400 wet n dry and started to do it by hand.. below is a photo taken after 20 mins of hard work lol
is there a better way to do this or does this seem ok?..
and what exactly is the power tool needed for... is that to get the marks off after.. am i fine to keep using the 400 grit until the whole cover looks like the left side
Cheers
Ajay
That progress photo is exactly what you should expect.
The tools you require are:
A metal polishing kit to fit a power drill, and or bench grinder,
and a bench grinder.
For finishing I use the Meguiars Metal Polish cause it smells nicer than pork fat, but they all do the same thing. Fine abrasive - basically the same thing as a compond such as Meguiars Scratch X.
Yep - it will be hard work, but the results are worth it
Founder of the QLD Chapter of the Honourable Brothers of Dodgy.
Benefactor of the Perpetual Dodgy award - Inaugural year 2007.
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