ashman
VIP MEMBER
- Joined
- Jul 11, 2010
- Messages
- 6,452
I have been running alloy rims on my Norton since 1980 ($90 each at the time Akront rims) I will never go back to chrome rims on any of my bikes, not even SS rims, the alloy rims look great, polish them up and they look like chrome, never rust out, lighter and laced with SS spokes they look great and they do make a big differance in handling you wouldn't think so but they do, I am glad my 2013 Thruxton came with alloy rims, another thing to remember chrome weakens metal.
I have had my orginal chrome rims rust out or the chrome lifing with only a year on the road and the same thing happened when I brought my 1981 Triumph Thunderbird the chrome lifed before the warranty ran out so they replace them I would have replaced them with the Akront rims but the price of them at the time had doubled after a year from getting my Norton rims and I was poor at the time.
The first full time job I had after leaving school was working at a chrome plating plant, very dangours job, lots of unsafe chemicals and health and safety wasn't around in them days, I was glad to get out of there after 11 months working there.
The reason most Chroming plants are closing is the expensance in running cost as well as envormental concerns as well as health issures to their workers, a lot of cancer causing chemicals are used in the process.
Alloy forever.
Ashley
I have had my orginal chrome rims rust out or the chrome lifing with only a year on the road and the same thing happened when I brought my 1981 Triumph Thunderbird the chrome lifed before the warranty ran out so they replace them I would have replaced them with the Akront rims but the price of them at the time had doubled after a year from getting my Norton rims and I was poor at the time.
The first full time job I had after leaving school was working at a chrome plating plant, very dangours job, lots of unsafe chemicals and health and safety wasn't around in them days, I was glad to get out of there after 11 months working there.
The reason most Chroming plants are closing is the expensance in running cost as well as envormental concerns as well as health issures to their workers, a lot of cancer causing chemicals are used in the process.
Alloy forever.
Ashley