You can build, rebuild or fix an aluminium panel at your home.
First remove scratches using sand paper into one direction only.. use sandpaper grain 120, and them 360 and then 500.... also you can use steel brush and polishing powder...... wash the panel and let it dry.
Scratching again will remove the old scratches..now substituted with your own scratches..use a piece of wood as a guide to sand in straigth lines, along the length.
After dried you can use a brush that has no metal surfaces, or prepare your own brush cutting your hair or your dog's hairs and fixing into a tip of wood or a pencil... then apply the Oxálic Acid solution...be carefull, it is toxic, use gloves and open the windows...the chemical material (sold as iron oxid stain remover from clothing..used into laundry) will boil in contact with the aluminium surface and this will result in a beautifull white finishment...a metalic and resistant result, that does not shines.
Then apply letraset, or paint... well... do the way you want to produce the panel letters, also you can order a silk screen work for your panel.. i suggest, as final, to paint using transparent automotive paint.
The products shown are used into our home laundry, also to keep cooking pots pretty and shinny.
Some of them are constituted by Oxalic Acid diluted with water....others are Sulfuric Acid and some phosphatizer element.... the Oxalic Acid is the one produces the better results..others use to clean the aluminium surface only.
Those slide movies will be helpfull..first one in English and second in Portuguese:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qUQGLNxoaHc
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HzGPe9xFllk
regards,
Carlos
First remove scratches using sand paper into one direction only.. use sandpaper grain 120, and them 360 and then 500.... also you can use steel brush and polishing powder...... wash the panel and let it dry.
Scratching again will remove the old scratches..now substituted with your own scratches..use a piece of wood as a guide to sand in straigth lines, along the length.
After dried you can use a brush that has no metal surfaces, or prepare your own brush cutting your hair or your dog's hairs and fixing into a tip of wood or a pencil... then apply the Oxálic Acid solution...be carefull, it is toxic, use gloves and open the windows...the chemical material (sold as iron oxid stain remover from clothing..used into laundry) will boil in contact with the aluminium surface and this will result in a beautifull white finishment...a metalic and resistant result, that does not shines.
Then apply letraset, or paint... well... do the way you want to produce the panel letters, also you can order a silk screen work for your panel.. i suggest, as final, to paint using transparent automotive paint.
The products shown are used into our home laundry, also to keep cooking pots pretty and shinny.
Some of them are constituted by Oxalic Acid diluted with water....others are Sulfuric Acid and some phosphatizer element.... the Oxalic Acid is the one produces the better results..others use to clean the aluminium surface only.
Those slide movies will be helpfull..first one in English and second in Portuguese:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qUQGLNxoaHc
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HzGPe9xFllk
regards,
Carlos
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Use it wearing plastic gloves..avoid to breath.
carefull not to let the chemical drop into ceramic floor, or ceramic walls, or ceramic pots.
just that..and be happy!
regards,
Carlos
carefull not to let the chemical drop into ceramic floor, or ceramic walls, or ceramic pots.
just that..and be happy!
regards,
Carlos
Ah, the Oxalic acid is used to oxidize and chemically anodize the aluminum. Clever use of household ingredients.
I use some very dilluted used PCB etchant (originally HCl + peroxide, but CuCl, HCl and peroxide now) to etch lettering/designs into aluminum panels. Use paint or toner to mask off everything you don't want to be black. If you don't dillute, the reaction can be VERY intense - it will eat through about .5mm per minute with alot of gas released. But the resulting finish is matte black and very durable.
I use some very dilluted used PCB etchant (originally HCl + peroxide, but CuCl, HCl and peroxide now) to etch lettering/designs into aluminum panels. Use paint or toner to mask off everything you don't want to be black. If you don't dillute, the reaction can be VERY intense - it will eat through about .5mm per minute with alot of gas released. But the resulting finish is matte black and very durable.
Interesting use for the etchant Ferris
Sorry, Fenris is your forum name...i just could not edit to fix my error...the old forum software was better in some points...well..nothing is perfect.
I am glad to know the etchant does this nice job Fenris.
thank you,
regards,
Carlos
Sorry, Fenris is your forum name...i just could not edit to fix my error...the old forum software was better in some points...well..nothing is perfect.
I am glad to know the etchant does this nice job Fenris.
thank you,
regards,
Carlos
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Yes Nigelwright5557, i know that..works fine too.
Let's go boys...post your ideas here.... the diy aluminium threatment tips and tricks.
regards,
Carloa
Let's go boys...post your ideas here.... the diy aluminium threatment tips and tricks.
regards,
Carloa
We used to use a caustic soda solution to get rid of scratches on aluminium panels.
Hi to all
I know that the caustic soda (NaOH) can corrode aluminium. It is used and in anodizing proccess. I have experimented a little with a solution of 50% NaOH on water. But the corrosion was very fast and not of similar race on the alu surface. Can you Nigel give me some informations about?
Thanks
Fotios
Hi to all
I know that the caustic soda (NaOH) can corrode aluminium. It is used and in anodizing proccess. I have experimented a little with a solution of 50% NaOH on water. But the corrosion was very fast and not of similar race on the alu surface. Can you Nigel give me some informations about?
Thanks
Fotios
To be honest I cant remember the caustic soda to water ratio that was used.
I've used automotive body filler (Bondo) for making holes in aluminum panels go away. Helps if you use a bit of fiberGlas mesh on the chassis side and are patient sanding. Automotive grade sand paper is readily available at your NAPA store.
As far as I know, sodium hydroxide REMOVES the anodized film from alumnium, it's how you remove bad anodizing if you want to re-do it.
Freshly acid etched aluminium will spontaneously oxidize in air, but the oxide layer is porous, and will stain easily with fingerprints, etc.
Freshly acid etched aluminium will spontaneously oxidize in air, but the oxide layer is porous, and will stain easily with fingerprints, etc.
I have painted all my Cobra Citizen Radio aluminium panels
after the Oxalic treatment and silk screen they were painted with automotive varnish.... and this worked fine..they are alike brand new and some of them were made 19 years ago.... seems last for a very good time.... in the reality they became a little bit yellow while time passes by...but continue to protect the panel print and aluminium surface.
When time has passed it looks alike the Champagne colour we had into some Marantz receivers down the eigthies.
Without the paint the fingerprints will destroy your work..reason why i was clear to suggest people to paint, but was into the Portuguese version..now i have included the need to paint the surface into the English vídeo too... the youtube video, now has that written on it.
regards,
Carlos
after the Oxalic treatment and silk screen they were painted with automotive varnish.... and this worked fine..they are alike brand new and some of them were made 19 years ago.... seems last for a very good time.... in the reality they became a little bit yellow while time passes by...but continue to protect the panel print and aluminium surface.
When time has passed it looks alike the Champagne colour we had into some Marantz receivers down the eigthies.
Without the paint the fingerprints will destroy your work..reason why i was clear to suggest people to paint, but was into the Portuguese version..now i have included the need to paint the surface into the English vídeo too... the youtube video, now has that written on it.
regards,
Carlos
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