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bumper blades

Posted: Wed Sep 14, 2011 8:58 pm
by stevensani
Hi does anybody know the best place to buy bumper blads.
Had a quote from mmc birmingham for both blades and bolts( £240 ouch.)

Re: bumper blades

Posted: Wed Sep 14, 2011 9:21 pm
by simmitc
If you want quality, then Birmingham's are the best that I've found. If you want cheaper then you get what you pay for.

Re: bumper blades

Posted: Thu Sep 15, 2011 7:14 am
by kennatt
you can get them a lot cheaper but they are poor quality and show signs of blistering after a year or so(mine lasted about 18months as did the other bits of chromework) depends on how much you are prepared to pay.

Re: bumper blades

Posted: Thu Sep 15, 2011 5:53 pm
by minor65
I purchased my new bumper blades from ESM and no complaints, plus free postage :D :D

Re: bumper blades

Posted: Fri Sep 16, 2011 10:33 am
by Mick_Anik
I'm going to experiment by painting mine (I have an extra set). I spent the odd hour here than there with a flat knife-sharpening stone to matt off the existing chrome.....with ear protection, since the noise is horrendous :). Really, really horrendous! But it doesn't leave any scars on the blade. I did the over-riders as well.

I'd be grateful for advice on what undercoat to use. The chrome is still there, just matted. I plan to use the same colour as the rest of the car, with with a bit of white added so they come up lighter but in the same tone zone.

Has anyone done this, I wonder?

Re: bumper blades

Posted: Fri Sep 16, 2011 11:38 am
by chrisryder
take a look at this convertible.

http://www.classiccarsmc.co.uk/Morris-M ... tible.html

not sure what they used as a base coat.

Re: bumper blades

Posted: Fri Sep 16, 2011 6:18 pm
by Mick_Anik
Thanks Chris!

"Undercoat"?

It's all this grinding and stuff :)......fried brain! I'm not paining a house!

Yes - primer/base coat.

It's a possible alternative to paying a lot, or paying little and getting blisters on the cheap chrome. The prep is the problem. I can't see how a grinder could be used without deforming the surface to be painted. Perhaps a very fine flap disc and a gentle approach? I don't see filler being an option, but I could be wrong.

Frequently am :).

Maybe someone has a clue on this. I'll surf around in the meantime looking for clues.