Hub polishing
#2
__________________
1 Super Record bike, 1 Nuovo Record bike, 1 Pista, 1 Road, 1 Cyclocross/Allrounder, 1 MTB, 1 Touring, 1 Fixed gear
1 Super Record bike, 1 Nuovo Record bike, 1 Pista, 1 Road, 1 Cyclocross/Allrounder, 1 MTB, 1 Touring, 1 Fixed gear
#3
Senior Member
Joined: Nov 2005
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Bikes: Cinelli, Paramount, Raleigh, Carlton, Zeus, Gemniani, Frejus, Legnano, Pinarello, Falcon
Campagnolo hubs seem to shine up pretty well with just fine steelwool and Semichrome. Anything that's more oxidized benefits from a buffing wheel.
#4
And it's Simichrome.
#5
King of the molehills
Joined: May 2006
Posts: 1,192
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From: Detroit 'burbs, east side.
Bikes: '04 Giant OCR2, DIY light tourer built on on Scattante cross frame, '87 Schwinn World Sport F/G conversion, '85 Schwinn Super Le Tour
Ooh! Bookmarked it. Thanks!
However, let me make a pitch for "synthetic steel wool", basically a grey Scotchbrite pad. Easier on the hands and not as harsh on soft metals as steel wool.
For whatever reason, using WD40 as an initial polishing/cleaning medium with the syn steel wool works quite well for me. Just something I stumbled upon.
#6
juneeaa memba!


Joined: Oct 2003
Posts: 5,631
Likes: 5
From: boogled up in...Idaho!
Bikes: Crap. The box is not big enough...
I got into a big long discussion about polishing campy hubs with a guy on eBay once. He insisted that the hubs were anodized and even a little polish would remove the finish, and (in his opinion) ruin the hubs. I was selling, and he wanted to know if I'd ever polished them. No, I hadn't, unless cleaning them with a rag is polishing (which, I suppose, it is). He didn't end up buying them. I still am not sure that the old style campy hubs are anodized, though. They shine very easily compared to the rest of the parts in those groups.
I personally like the little leather strips with the reflector attached. Shine your hubs safely at night!
I personally like the little leather strips with the reflector attached. Shine your hubs safely at night!
#9
Passista


Joined: Jul 2005
Posts: 8,250
Likes: 1,211
Bikes: 1998 Pinarello Asolo, 1992 KHS Montaña pro, 1980 Raleigh DL-1, IGH Hybrid, IGH Utility
In my experience, if the part is anodized, you can polish it by hand with a rag and some auto polish. It won't remove scratches, just clean the surface, and there will be no black residue on the cloth. If it isn't anodized and has scratches or marks, you could use some very fine sandpaper (#600/#1000) and then auto polish. But if you want to remove scratches or pitting on an anodized part, you must remove all the anodizing first. No problem with that, except you should polish the part frequently afterwards because it'll be prone to spots, e.g. if it gets wet.
#10
Bottecchia fan

Joined: Aug 2003
Posts: 3,520
Likes: 12
From: Colorado Springs, CO
Bikes: 1959 Bottecchia Milano-Sanremo (frame), 1966 Bottecchia Professional (frame), 1971 Bottecchia Professional (frame), 1973 Bottecchia Gran Turismo, 1974 Bottecchia Special, 1977 Bottecchia Special (frame), 1974 Peugeot UO-8
I got into a big long discussion about polishing campy hubs with a guy on eBay once. He insisted that the hubs were anodized and even a little polish would remove the finish, and (in his opinion) ruin the hubs. I was selling, and he wanted to know if I'd ever polished them. No, I hadn't, unless cleaning them with a rag is polishing (which, I suppose, it is). He didn't end up buying them. I still am not sure that the old style campy hubs are anodized, though. They shine very easily compared to the rest of the parts in those groups.
I personally like the little leather strips with the reflector attached. Shine your hubs safely at night!
I personally like the little leather strips with the reflector attached. Shine your hubs safely at night!
__________________
1959 Bottecchia Milano-Sanremo(frame), 1966 Bottecchia Professional (frame), 1971 Bottecchia Professional (frame),
1973 Bottecchia Gran Turismo, 1974 Bottecchia Special, 1977 Bottecchia Special (frame),
1974 Peugeot UO-8, 1988 Panasonic PT-3500, 2002 Bianchi Veloce, 2004 Bianchi Pista
1959 Bottecchia Milano-Sanremo(frame), 1966 Bottecchia Professional (frame), 1971 Bottecchia Professional (frame),
1973 Bottecchia Gran Turismo, 1974 Bottecchia Special, 1977 Bottecchia Special (frame),
1974 Peugeot UO-8, 1988 Panasonic PT-3500, 2002 Bianchi Veloce, 2004 Bianchi Pista
#11
#12
Senior Member
Joined: Nov 2005
Posts: 5,768
Likes: 10
Bikes: Cinelli, Paramount, Raleigh, Carlton, Zeus, Gemniani, Frejus, Legnano, Pinarello, Falcon
You can polish the anodizing off with a buffing wheel, though it takes quite a bit of work.
The Campagnolo Tipo and Record/Nuovo Record hubs were never anodized. I don't think Normandys or Zeus are either, nor the Gnutti I recently built. Don't know about the Japanese stuff.
#13
juneeaa memba!


Joined: Oct 2003
Posts: 5,631
Likes: 5
From: boogled up in...Idaho!
Bikes: Crap. The box is not big enough...
...and the little leather straps do a pretty good job, too.
#14
Ray Dobbins' (excellent) article has a list of what Campy (Record?) components were anodized, and which weren't. Hubs, seatposts not; crank arms, SR headset and RD aluminum, brake caliper arms yes. If you look closely, you can generally tell by the color.
#15






