quote:
Originally posted by wwheeler
I have done an appearance comparison between golden cad plating and yellow chromated zinc plating. I just had my throttle linkages and relay support on the firewall professionally replated using golden cadmium. I have also plated many small things at home using a zinc plating kit and then coloring (chromating) to a yellow tint. Here are the appearance differences:
The golden cadmium has a rainbow effect on top of a gold opaque base. The yellow zinc also has a rainbow effect but the gold color is more transparent or clear. The look of the base gold color is the big difference.
I like to apply a thin satin gloss clear (Eastwood)to the plated surface to seal it and prevent fading. This clear will make the plating last a very long time and will be easy to clean. The downside to the clear is that it mutes the rainbow effect on both zinc and cadmium. The good news is that it brings the two types of plating closer in appearance.
As stated earlier, cad is more durable and correct than zinc. Since these linkages were too large for me to plate at home, I had them cad plated. Cad does not cost that much more than professional zinc plating but cannot be done at home because cadmium is highly toxic. However, taking small nuts and bolts to the plater can get expensive in a hurry and is a pain which is why I do them at home. For me, it is a compromise between corectness, durability, price and convienence. I always try to use the same plating system on mating parts so the appearance is consistent.
Wallace,
It is important to remember--not so much for you but for everyone else without the direct experience either with the chemistry kits you are playing with or the professionals you have used, that the "gold" color applied is not a plating. It is a reactive "phosphate wash" so to speak, that is created on top of the fresh zinc or cadmium plating, and isn't there for looks but for added protection.
I think that even when pros do it, there are differences in how the coloring looks. The color comes from whether or not "Trivalent" Chromates are used, or "Hexavalent"; how many times the product is dipped; the thickness of the coating created, and the underlying color of the base plating.
The "gold cadmium" that I had done had not a whit of rainbow look to it; the silver cadmium (clear) was flat, too. These were from Prime Plating. But if you look at paint kits from Eastwood that want to mimic gold cadmium plating they are trying to achieve a mottled, rainbow look that you describe.
Check around and you'll see that many platers offer a variety of these protective finishes over their base plating; in addition to the traditional yellow, there's blue, black, olive drab to name a few.