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Or would you etch? They do look great and I could never do that!
Will they tear apart under load? Will I really be able to attach them to axles true and square?Should I nickel plate them? If I don't and I just blacken them, will they last on the rails, being made out of brass?
That should not be a problem. Most model locomotive wheels are made from plated brass. After heavy usage the thin plating wears off and the thread takes on the gold color of brass. But the exposed brass doesn't seem to wear out any faster than whatever the plating material was. However the bare-brass tread seems to get dirty quicker (and needs to be cleaned more often) than when the wheels still have the plating on them.
I think it's more the oxidation than the dirt.Bare brass oxidizes faster than nickel, and it is not as conductive as the oxidation on the nickel.This is the main thing I'm thinking about that makes me consider plating them....It only has to be about .001" thick - not enough to cause trouble even if it's not perfectly uniform.
You are joking about the plating being 0.001" thick, right? I suspect that the plating thickness typical for those electroplating kits is more in the 0.0001" range (or thinner). Unless you leave the item to be plated in the solution for hours.I don't think that even the factory plated wheels are plated to 0.001" thickness.
I spoke to the folks at Caswell, and they said that if I leave it in the solution for 1 hour, it will plate to a .001"thickness. If I do it by spinning it and holding a saturated wand on it, I may just spin it until it "looks good."Something tells me that if I don't plate the treads (and the flanges of course), I will regret it.