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- Camaro and Firebird How to Paint Brake Calipers<br>Step by step instructions for do-it-yourself repairs.
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- Chevrolet Camaro 2010-2015: How to Paint Your Brake Calipers
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How to paint your brake calipers
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Duplicolor makes a paint kit that you can buy at a local auto parts store (that guide says to use engine enamel, which I tried first, and it flaked and chipped badly after 6 months+).
Don't use a paint brush though, buy the paint brushes at Warlmart that use the sponge for the tip and just paint it on after prep (you can be very detailed and accurate with these types of brushes too). The reason is that you may get hairs from the brush that pull out because the paint is very thick. They can get under the paint where you may not notice it, and cause the paint to chip at that point.
The prep part of that guide is good and saves you a lot of time if you don't want to remove them from the car.
Do A LOT of coats. Don't hold back. If you do only a few, it will chip if you don't hand wash your car every time. I've had to repaint mine three times because I was lazy and only did a few coats each time. This last time (hopefully for good) I did 6+ to each one over a weekend.
If that doesn't hold up, I'm just going to get them powder coated, heh.
Don't use a paint brush though, buy the paint brushes at Warlmart that use the sponge for the tip and just paint it on after prep (you can be very detailed and accurate with these types of brushes too). The reason is that you may get hairs from the brush that pull out because the paint is very thick. They can get under the paint where you may not notice it, and cause the paint to chip at that point.
The prep part of that guide is good and saves you a lot of time if you don't want to remove them from the car.
Do A LOT of coats. Don't hold back. If you do only a few, it will chip if you don't hand wash your car every time. I've had to repaint mine three times because I was lazy and only did a few coats each time. This last time (hopefully for good) I did 6+ to each one over a weekend.
If that doesn't hold up, I'm just going to get them powder coated, heh.
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Install University has a guide on changing pads that would get you close enough I think.
http://www.installuniversity.com/ins...sity/index.htm
Under Install Documents > Brake Pad and Rotor Swap.
I think it just leaves the caliper's dangling by the brake line with support. So you may need to research crimping and removing the lines or something. Not really sure what you're supposed to do at that point ;)
http://www.installuniversity.com/ins...sity/index.htm
Under Install Documents > Brake Pad and Rotor Swap.
I think it just leaves the caliper's dangling by the brake line with support. So you may need to research crimping and removing the lines or something. Not really sure what you're supposed to do at that point ;)
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I would highly recommend you use 2 part Epoxy paint like G2 or Foliatec instead of engine enamel. The finish is comparable to powder coat, extremely durable and chemical resistant with a high gloss. It is a heat resistant caliper paint that is applied with a brush for around $40 (kit does at least a car and a half).
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#8
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I love these threads 90% of calipers sent to me for coating have 5-6 coats of paint on them, chipping left and right which is why they got sent to me to strip, blast and powder coat.
I 100% respect that not everyone has or wants to spent the money to send them out for powder, but fact remains is unless you never drive the car, paint will turn to crap in short order, regardless of the prep, and just frustrate the hell out of you. Aluminum expands and contracts with heat..paint is brittle and cannot handle this, doesn't take long before it starts coming off.
I 100% respect that not everyone has or wants to spent the money to send them out for powder, but fact remains is unless you never drive the car, paint will turn to crap in short order, regardless of the prep, and just frustrate the hell out of you. Aluminum expands and contracts with heat..paint is brittle and cannot handle this, doesn't take long before it starts coming off.
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Once I get new rotors and pads and decide on a different color my calipers will be sent to SilverGhost to get powdercoated. Save yourself some time and get them powdercoated. I painted mine a few years ago and they look like crap now.
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I love these threads 90% of calipers sent to me for coating have 5-6 coats of paint on them, chipping left and right which is why they got sent to me to strip, blast and powder coat.
I 100% respect that not everyone has or wants to spent the money to send them out for powder, but fact remains is unless you never drive the car, paint will turn to crap in short order, regardless of the prep, and just frustrate the hell out of you. Aluminum expands and contracts with heat..paint is brittle and cannot handle this, doesn't take long before it starts coming off.
I 100% respect that not everyone has or wants to spent the money to send them out for powder, but fact remains is unless you never drive the car, paint will turn to crap in short order, regardless of the prep, and just frustrate the hell out of you. Aluminum expands and contracts with heat..paint is brittle and cannot handle this, doesn't take long before it starts coming off.
2 part Epoxy Caliper paint hasn't chipped or flaked off my calipers and it has been on the car for 5 or 6 years back when the car was a DD. In fact it still has the same high gloss as it did when it was first done. They are sealed so well I don't take any special care to clean of wipe them down because dirt/dust doesn't stick to the finish.
I would also consider doing the brackets a different color than the calipers. I have seen SilverGhost do it and have done them this way as well and I think it gives even more of a custom look.
#11
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Don't have to have the car laid up. I have an exchange program. I ship a set of calipers and brackets coated and ready to install, and you ship yours back Can even come with fresh GM rebuilds installed for $100 extra, like new calipers.
DriftR--fact of the matter is most people don't understand, or care, to do the prep work right. Prep is everything regardless of coating. I've had plenty of sets come through here with the two part on them that was coming off all over. Its like the guys who expoxy their garage floors and don't do anything more than sweep it off first, and the epoxy comes up the first time they pull their car in. Prep is the hard part, hell its 90% of my day every day in here, actually laying powder is the smallest time spent.
DriftR--fact of the matter is most people don't understand, or care, to do the prep work right. Prep is everything regardless of coating. I've had plenty of sets come through here with the two part on them that was coming off all over. Its like the guys who expoxy their garage floors and don't do anything more than sweep it off first, and the epoxy comes up the first time they pull their car in. Prep is the hard part, hell its 90% of my day every day in here, actually laying powder is the smallest time spent.
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DriftR--fact of the matter is most people don't understand, or care, to do the prep work right. Prep is everything regardless of coating. I've had plenty of sets come through here with the two part on them that was coming off all over. Its like the guys who expoxy their garage floors and don't do anything more than sweep it off first, and the epoxy comes up the first time they pull their car in. Prep is the hard part, hell its 90% of my day every day in here, actually laying powder is the smallest time spent.
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I love these threads 90% of calipers sent to me for coating have 5-6 coats of paint on them, chipping left and right which is why they got sent to me to strip, blast and powder coat.
I 100% respect that not everyone has or wants to spent the money to send them out for powder, but fact remains is unless you never drive the car, paint will turn to crap in short order, regardless of the prep, and just frustrate the hell out of you. Aluminum expands and contracts with heat..paint is brittle and cannot handle this, doesn't take long before it starts coming off.
I 100% respect that not everyone has or wants to spent the money to send them out for powder, but fact remains is unless you never drive the car, paint will turn to crap in short order, regardless of the prep, and just frustrate the hell out of you. Aluminum expands and contracts with heat..paint is brittle and cannot handle this, doesn't take long before it starts coming off.
any info on the d1sc camaro in your sig? cubes/boost/trans?
#14
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All 4 calipers and brackets any colors you want, $220 shipped to the lower 48..if you send yours or do the exchange, price is the same. Includes complete dissasembly and inspection of wear parts, blasting, coating, and complete re-assembly. Fresh GM rebuilds installed for $100 is an option with me as well if you want the caliper like new again.
On the car..its a 347 motor, not built for boost with too much compression. 13 lbs of boost in nice cool air, TH400 trans with 4500 converter and a brake. 3:73 gear in a 12 bolt and a PST aluminum DS. Small cam, ls6 intake, hand ported LS6 heads. Goes ok for a street car at 3400 raceweight. be alot faster if i didn't have to tune around the compression being too high, and leaned on the boost.