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To plate an anodized mast, you would need to strip it completely first
(back to bare metal that is - losing the thick oxide film.) Brian Whatcott On Wed, 29 Jun 2005 09:52:09 GMT, "Roger Derby" wrote: If you want to, Google "gold plating wand" and ignore the Harry Potter hits. Rio Grande used to sell the kits, but I couldn't navigate their web site. Check out http://www.caswellplating.com/kits/plugnplate.htm if you really want to build a goldplater. According to Caswell, for aluminum, you first "zincate," then nickel plate, and then put on the gold. Note this is not at all the same thing as anodizing. Roger http://home.earthlink.net/~derbyrm "Terry Spragg" wrote in message ... wrote: snip We used to have a similar kit for doing gold plating on electrical terminals in military connectors. It used a deadly poisonous gold cyanide plating paste, and an electrical "Q" tip. The gold was a "B" class consumable! Could never figure out how to actually order the gold, though;-) Thanks, Terry K |
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