quote:
Originally posted by gugel
FWIW, when I first started looking for a chrome plater in SoCal I heard that De La Torre Plating was very good, but when I took them some parts for an estimate, I found them extremely obnoxious. Also, the estimate was ridiculously high -- he clearly wasn't interested in doing the job. Obviously my experience differs from that of others -- perhaps he just took a dislike to me.
I used Verne's, whom Mike mentioned (http://www.verneschromeplating.com/) and was quite happy with their work. However, they wouldn't accept pot metal parts for plating (the caps for the posts behind the doors).
I also used Supreme Plating and Coating, 330 East Beach Ave., Inglewood, CA 310-671-3640, and was satisfied with the work.
Chris Earnest
Chris,
Your point about
obnoxious is pretty funny: in Warren, MI there is a well known plater called "Fini Finish".
http://www.fini-finish.com/ It looks like today, they have merged or something with another company, but when I was looking for B&L--a firm I ended up using for all my trim work--I ended up driving past this place on the way to B&L. I stopped and looked.
First, they make a specialty not only in
plating, but in
restoration of pot metal. So, that crusty old door handle from a 1938 Buick barn find can be restored to better than new; for a price of course.
The problem was, the guy who ran the place was a "piece of work". I guess he got so tired of people asking the same stupid questions over and over again (remember, someone restoring a 1965 Corvair is of a different ilk than someone restoring a Classic Duesenberg) that he basically
painted a series of FAQ's all over his building! You had to walk around the entire building reading all this stuff to make a determination of whether or not you deemed yourself worthy of entering! Heaven forbid if you came in, asked for a moment of his time, and the answer was on the building! He'd been known to throw people out, I was subsequently told. I read all these questions, and determined that he would do things his way, at his price, on his timetable, and got a bad feeling. Few other places in the country will restore pot metal, but he would. Thankfully I didn't have any pot metal restoration to do. Just finding this place was a hoot, actually.
William Wheeler, there are many reasons why a chrome job can go bad. Here are a few: NOT stripping to base (i.e. just removing chrome and replating over existing copper and nickel); not enough time in the bath(s) yielding a "thin" plaing; improper base finishing; not enough copper or nickel plating. The results can be chrome that starts peeling, and or discolorations showing through that can't really be polished out.