SarahLadd
Member
Has anyone tried this?
Can’t you just run a current on it to dial in some colour again?I tried it. It can be laid but it loses its colour and ends up looking like steel.
It would depend greatly on the metal it is inlaid to. The Niobium is anodized in a plating bath compounded to the color and the Niobium. The bath will most certainly cause a color change to most metals the wire would be inlaid to. Unlike anodized aluminum, Niobium starts losing it's color as soon as heat is applied. Depending on the color, it can happen at low enough heat inputs of the type you would encounter just bending the wire (ie, inlaying it.).Can’t you just run a current on it to dial in some colour again?
Mask off, hook your anodiser to the metal ferrule of a paintbrush and paint the colour on with the brush wetted in electrolyte.The Niobium is anodized in a plating bath compounded to the color and the Niobium.
Brush plating is more difficult than it appears to be. I have brush plating equipment sophisticated enough for mil-spec work. I have done detailed work like what is suggested here. The results won’t be what is expected.Mask off, hook your anodiser to the metal ferrule of a paintbrush and paint the colour on with the brush wetted in electrolyte.