Regarding re-chroming original steel rims for an original restoration- I've come across a few issues you all might encounter. My first choice is always to refinish the original rims and spokes, as aftermarket items always seem to lose something critical in translation.
First is hidden internal corrosion that's caused by moisture held by years of contact with the tire bead surfaces. You might think your rims aren't too bad until you remove the tires and look closely inside.
Second is chrome platers who over polish the stripped rims at the raised or domed areas where the nipples come out. I've heard of them being thinned out so badly that wheel lacing causes the nipples to pull right out through the rim! Imagine the frustration and wasted money...
Third is polishers that erase names/logos and size numbers stamped on the rims, such as DID, TAKASAGO, 2.15 X 18. I've left rims off at platers and specifically asked that original numbers and letters be left as is- "yes, no problem". Come back, look at completed rims and can't find any details, or a just a faint ghost image is left. Thanks for just devalueing my original parts and taking my restoration down a notch, and paying top dollar for it! Problem is that the polisher doing the preparation doesn't speak English, and just grinds away- doesn't know or care. How can you communicate your specific restoration needs if the worker doesn't speak or read the same language? I've had original castings and details smoothed away/erased forever, and ending up looking like show chopper parts. Pick your chrome plater carefully, not by price alone- they're all expensive. FRUSTRATING!
Did I mention that my ex-plater always moaned about rising supply prices and passed them along to customers, yet has a brand new $55K Ford F150 Harley Davidson edition truck outside?
