I painted the inside of the drivers side wheel arch so next time at the garage I'll be able to glue that one.
I also took apart the brake calipers and cleaned them with a wire wheel to make sure there's no paint left. I didn't bother to remove all the rust because it will be taken care of at the plating shop. I seem to have misplaced one carrier, though. Hope I'll be able to find it.
One of the pistons was pretty seized up. I tried different tricks for it. What helped in the end was I drilled some holes in the piston and put a steel bar through it. Then I clamped the caliper in vice, pressurized the cylinder with compressed air and started wiggling and turning the piston with the steel bar until it started slowly moving out and then popped free.
The brake calipers will be yellow zinc-chromate plated as well as the bolts for the RC:s. The bolts initially looked like the left one in this pic.
First I soaked the bolts and nuts in paint stripper to get rid of the thread locker and any remaining lacquer. Next I treated them with citric acid solution.
Then I rinsed them, dried them in oven and gave them a light coat of oil to avoid further rusting.
I gave the bolt heads a quick puff with cotton wheel and polishing wax to make sure they are presentable. Hope the shine wont be ruined in the plating process.
That took about a week at work doing 20 or 30 bolts a day at lunch break.
The wheel lips are mostly sanded up to 2000 grit using my ghetto wheel polisher:
I still need to roughen up and paint the backsides before polishing the lips. So what kind what kind of idiot has the patience and stupidity for this kind of stuff you may ask? This kind:
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