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Has anyone tracked on 'plasti-dip' coated wheels?
I'm curious how this coating stands up to the heat and rigors of the track?
Anyone have experience running this stuff on track? I have a set of rims to freshen up and this would be easier than de-mounting the tires and powder coating them. Might also be nice to have a protective coating on there to deal with the brake dust...... |
Holds up fine.
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If you are worried about brake dust.....
Maybe you shouldn't be on a race track. Maybe you should park hard bro! You know like those car circle jerk parties all over instagram. |
You cant even compare professional sandblasting/powder coating compared to driveway plastidip, no matter how much easier it is. Gotta pay to play or look just like the others.
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My personal car, no.
I have tracked a friends Evo-X with purple plastidipped wheels. They were sprayed out of a paint gun vs spray cans if that makes any difference. They have held up ok, but after 2 years they have lost their "look" as the brake dust is pretty embedded. Didn't seem to be much of an issue with heat, but I never took the car out for a full session ever. |
Rocks will tear this coating off pretty quickly. If rocks aren't an issue, I don't see why it wouldn't stay on. plastidip does not clean well in my experience,so be aware that while you may delay damage from corrosive dust, they're always going to look a bit... bleh. Honestly, for the cost to benefit, powdercoating is amazing. And it washes nicely.
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There is a spray on product you can use to help protect the coating from being stained by brake dust. It holds up under heat just fine. There is a similar product called flexidip. It sprays on thinner but also lays down flatter with less of a textured finish.
It won't have the up close finish of powder coating, but it's a nice way to change the look and protect the original finish. One can per wheel should give you a thick coating. I have always coated my winter steelies black. A four year old pair of wheels looked brand new when I sold my SX4 after peeling off the dip. |
no heat issues. Spraying it on thick and on a clean wheel surface are key.
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Back in the day, Steeda made a wheel for NASA's American Iron series. Might have been a spec wheel. They came in silver or powdercoated. There were lots failures and they were almost exclusively the powdercoated ones. Given how you have to heat a wheel and what heat can do to compromise strength, it doesn't seem like an unreasonable concern.
Regarding plastidip? If they mess up or look bad after some time, just re-do them. Isn't that the point? |
There is a range of temperatures used to powdercoat things. Some super hot; some not so hot. The lower temperatures aren't far off what a wheel might see at a race track. I wouldn't use your example to say ALL wheel powdercoating will increase the likeliness of failures.
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Lots of good brake pads have dust that just wipes right off, if you haven't been to the track yet just go and don't defer to 'protect your wheels' they'll be fine. |
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