Author Topic: Charlies Angels Restoration  (Read 8640 times)

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Offline Brettski

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Re: Charlies Angels Restoration
« Reply #45 on: April 18, 2016, 10:20:03 PM »
Set up a Zinc Plating system to refresh and rust proof brackets and other pieces and the results are better than I expected.

I have found that soaking screws/bolts/nuts etc in vinegar over night  then into the vibrator/polisher works a treat to remove rust and shine things good again, everything else that is rusty or corroded gets the vinegar soak, cleaned then zinc plated and polished.

This should add a new dimension to my restorations.

The cabinet will be stripped down this week to prepare for paint and stencils.

Cheers: Brettski... :)

Offline ddstoys

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Re: Charlies Angels Restoration
« Reply #46 on: April 18, 2016, 11:02:00 PM »
Nice good to see the plating kits in action I'll get one one day

Offline Brettski

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Re: Charlies Angels Restoration
« Reply #47 on: April 18, 2016, 11:48:36 PM »
Nice good to see the plating kits in action I'll get one one day

Hey Gav, this is a home brew kit

I had the power supply already but the rest cost about $30 - $40 I also bought gloves for using the Acid which you use to clean it with prior to electroplating

Bucket - Bunnings
Copper Wire (stripped it out of some scrap inner wall power cable)
Thin copper wire for hooks
Hydroclauric Acid - Bunnings
6 litres White Vinegar - Aldi (cheap)
1 kg Epsom salts
1 kg white sugar
Zinc Anodes - (free from local electroplating place)

If anyone is interested I can post the process, the results are fantastic once polished. I will post some pics tomorrow.

Brettski... :)
« Last Edit: April 18, 2016, 11:51:41 PM by Brettski »

Offline Boots

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Re: Charlies Angels Restoration
« Reply #48 on: April 19, 2016, 12:22:07 AM »
Nice work Brett

Offline Brettski

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Re: Charlies Angels Restoration
« Reply #49 on: May 21, 2016, 04:31:52 PM »
Update!

It has been a slow process due to limited finances this year but finally have the cabinet painted. Very happy with my budget stencils although they were a little tedious to setup perseverance paid off. I was unable to get the paint I wanted as my supplier changed brands and had to pick the closest I could, I used Ironlak on the Cleopatra and I was really happy with the colours. This time I used Loops and the colours were different, looks better in the pics than real life as the orange looks slightly brown out of the sun. Overall I am really happy with how it is turning out. I have also ordered a Pascal 4 in 1 board which should arrive any day, all I need are some new displays and to tidy up the legs to finish it and to stencil the back box.

Cheers: Brettski... :)

Offline Brettski

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Re: Charlies Angels Restoration
« Reply #50 on: May 21, 2016, 04:34:57 PM »
Here is what a Brand New one looked like.. :)

Brettski

Offline Brettski

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Re: Charlies Angels Restoration
« Reply #51 on: May 21, 2016, 10:09:29 PM »
Found this while researching cabinet artwork..

http://www.danielrolnikgallery.com/kilduffs-cavern/pinball-machine-by-john-kilduff

Well I haven't laughed so hard in a long time..

Here is the pic, but check out the link, the price will get you.. :)

Cheers: Brettski... :)

Offline robm

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Re: Re: Charlies Angels Restoration
« Reply #52 on: May 21, 2016, 10:14:35 PM »
Nice good to see the plating kits in action I'll get one one day

Hey Gav, this is a home brew kit

I had the power supply already but the rest cost about $30 - $40 I also bought gloves for using the Acid which you use to clean it with prior to electroplating

Bucket - Bunnings
Copper Wire (stripped it out of some scrap inner wall power cable)
Thin copper wire for hooks
Hydroclauric Acid - Bunnings
6 litres White Vinegar - Aldi (cheap)
1 kg Epsom salts
1 kg white sugar
Zinc Anodes - (free from local electroplating place)

If anyone is interested I can post the process, the results are fantastic once polished. I will post some pics tomorrow.

Brettski... :)
Project is looking great mate. Would definitely be interested in more info on your home brew plating!

Sent from my SM-G930F using Tapatalk

Offline Brettski

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Re: Re: Charlies Angels Restoration
« Reply #53 on: May 21, 2016, 11:26:32 PM »
Nice good to see the plating kits in action I'll get one one day

Hey Gav, this is a home brew kit

I had the power supply already but the rest cost about $30 - $40 I also bought gloves for using the Acid which you use to clean it with prior to electroplating

Bucket - Bunnings
Copper Wire (stripped it out of some scrap inner wall power cable)
Thin copper wire for hooks
Hydroclauric Acid - Bunnings
6 litres White Vinegar - Aldi (cheap)
1 kg Epsom salts
1 kg white sugar
Zinc Anodes - (free from local electroplating place)

If anyone is interested I can post the process, the results are fantastic once polished. I will post some pics tomorrow.

Brettski... :)
Project is looking great mate. Would definitely be interested in more info on your home brew plating!

Sent from my SM-G930F using Tapatalk

Here is the recipe and method I use for my Zinc Plating..

Home Zinc Plating Instructions..
 

9 - 11 Litre plastic bucket

Zinc anodes... I got a handfull of zinc balls from a local elecrtroplater.

1kg of Epsom salts

6 - 8 litres of white vinegar...Aldi $1.19 ltr

1.5kg of white sugar to be used as a brightener.

Thick copper wire for the anodes, I used some stripped back inner wall electrical cable.

A few strands of light guage copper wire for hanging parts.

1 piece of copper water pipe or use the thick copper wire cable tied to a piece of wood for the cathode hanger

Multi Power Supply, I have one that has 2v, 4v, 6v, 8v, 10v, 12v, I only use the two volts mostly and for bigger parts 4v (slower adhesion at lower voltages but better quality)

200ml of hydrochloric acid to be used as an acid dip before plating... you can get this at Bunnings.

Fine grade steel wool.

 

Method

Electrolyte

Mix Vinegar, Epsom salts and sugar together until dissolved in the bucket.

Drill a small hole in two zinc balls, then attach reasonable lengths of the heavier gauge copper wire to them with screws and place them in the bucket at equal spacing, do not let the screws touch the water then bend the wire over the edge of the bucket to support them in place and wire them in such a way that they are both connected and there is some bare wire to connect your power to. (See pic)


Next get your copper pipe and flatten the ends the same width as the bucket so it doesn't roll and while doing this squash a piece of heavy gauge wire in one end... this will be your cathode hanger. Or use thick copper wire cable tied to a piece of wood.

Place this on top of the bucket and make sure it is not touching any of your anode wiring or it will short out.

Attach the positive to the anode (Zinc) wiring and the negative to the cathode wire (copper pipe).... turn on power and your almost ready to start.

Now before plating your good parts you need to plate out the electrolyte... this sets up the solution for complete surface coating.... this means you have to get zinc ions in the solution for it to plate quickly and evenly.

To do this you need roughly a square piece of metal about 50mm square that has been wire brushed of all contaminates and dipped in the hydrochloric solution (read about hydrochloric solution below) and hang this submerged in your electrolyte with the power on. You should see a slight fizzing going on....this needs to run like this overnight if possible. I also placed an extra zinc ball into the water which just sat on the bottom during this process.

 

Hydrochloric solution.

1 litre of water to 200ml of acid mixed well.....wear gloves and glasses as this stuff burns like nothing else so be very carefull.

This will be your parts dip..... keep another bucket of plain water handy to rinse parts after dipping.

 

Parts cleaning and plating

Clean all dirt and grease of the parts before doing anything else, I use dish washing detergent and water.

Then hang your parts in the hydrochloric solution... you may see some fizzing going on, this will be the previous zinc coating being dissolved by the acid and this will also remove surface rust.

After the fizzing has stopped rinse the part thoroughly in fresh water and dry off with a rag.

Next you need to wire wheel the part back to bright steel.

Once that is done dip your part into the hydrochloric acid quickly and then rinse and very quickly hang in the zinc bucket submerged, if you wait to long to hang it, it will flash rust and you will have to start again.

Now that it is in the zinc bucket you can leave it to do it's thing, you will see some fizzing and that's good, it is now being plated with zinc. Leave it in the zinc bucket for 30  minutes or until completely plated evenly

When you pull the part out it will have a dull grey appearance but should be completely coated in zinc.

 

Brightening up the part.


You can clean the part up with some fine grade steel wool or buff it on a polishing wheel to get a chrome like appearance.

You can also use a week solution of aluminium cleaner (chemtech BLITZ) available at Supercheap mixed with water.

Dip your parts in this one at a time and using a stainless parts cleaning brush brush the parts to a bright shine then finish of with fine steel wool.... when satisfied rinse off with water and dry. ( wear gloves and glasses when doing this.)

You can replate at this stage if you want a heavier coating of zinc then repeat the cleaning procedure.

The attached picture should help with the instructions.

Hope this helps..

Cheers: Brettski... :)
 
 

Offline pinnies4me

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Re: Charlies Angels Restoration
« Reply #54 on: May 22, 2016, 09:08:37 AM »
Found this while researching cabinet artwork..

http://www.danielrolnikgallery.com/kilduffs-cavern/pinball-machine-by-john-kilduff

Well I haven't laughed so hard in a long time..

Here is the pic, but check out the link, the price will get you.. :)

Cheers: Brettski... :)

Good grief, my girls could do a better job than that!


Thanks for the electro plating info.
“If you wanna escape, go up to a pinball machine. There’s a magic button on the front that takes you to a world under the glass and makes the the rest of the universe disappear.”

Offline Brettski

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Re: Charlies Angels Restoration
« Reply #55 on: May 22, 2016, 01:11:46 PM »
Found this while researching cabinet artwork..

http://www.danielrolnikgallery.com/kilduffs-cavern/pinball-machine-by-john-kilduff

Well I haven't laughed so hard in a long time..

Here is the pic, but check out the link, the price will get you.. :)

Cheers: Brettski... :)

The funny thing is he wants more for his cardboard job than an actual real machine! I love the Internet.. :) $#$

Cheers: Brettski... :)
Good grief, my girls could do a better job than that!


Thanks for the electro plating info.

Offline Brettski

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Re: Charlies Angels Restoration
« Reply #56 on: May 28, 2016, 08:33:43 PM »
Finally completed Charlie's Angels..

Really happy with how this came up, here is a pic.. will post some more pics and a video tomorrow.

Thanks for everyone's support and advice.

Here is a tip for anyone wanting to make budget stencils..

Prepare the artwork outlines in Photoshop at the correct dimensions, you can either trace or scan the artwork from your cabinet first. Then save the images and print out using a program like Poster Printer ( http://www.ronyasoft.com/products/proposter/ )
Stick all the pieces together and then cut out your shapes with scissors.
Get some plain white vinyl from a local sign printer and overlay your paper stencils and using a marker pen trace the outlines onto the vinyl.
Using a scalpel cut out your shapes in the vinyl and you now have your stencil ready to go.
Get a can of spray adhesive and spray one side of your vinyl stencil, let it sit for a few minutes then position on your cabinet. (Do Not Peel the Backing from the Vinyl)
Run your finger around all the edges of the stencil then spray paint it, immediately after spraying remove the stencil. Make sure you mask up everything properly. :) If you let the paint dry properly on the stencil after removing it you can flip it and use re use it on the other side.

Graffiti / Mural  artists use a particular paint for their artwork which is high pigmented and covers really well and works brilliantly on stencils and looks great on Pinball Machines.. Look for Ironlak or Loops, these two are the best brands to get. Only $8.00 a can and you can get a range of nozzles to suit your work.

If anyone has any questions regarding my techniques or products I use please ask..

Now that is done what am I going to do now? Looks like it's time to look for another project machine, would really love a close encounters if I am to do another system 1 but would really like to do an EM, something like Jetspin, Golden Arrow, Eldorado, Buccaneer or similar.. :)

Cheers: Brettski... :)

« Last Edit: May 28, 2016, 08:56:25 PM by Brettski »

Offline robm

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Re:
« Reply #57 on: May 28, 2016, 09:17:23 PM »
Looks fantastic!

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Offline Mr Pinbologist

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Re: Charlies Angels Restoration
« Reply #58 on: May 28, 2016, 09:30:26 PM »
Nice job Brettski.. looks sweet as  ^^^ ^^^

Offline Brettski

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Re: Charlies Angels Restoration
« Reply #59 on: May 30, 2016, 06:00:00 PM »
Thanks guy's appreciate it!..

Here is a pic! I just couldn't resist this!!!!!  LOL

Cheers: Brettski... :)