- The best way to accomplish 199 with polished lips is first polishing the lips, then having the rims oven-baked with hard lacquer and then only painting the centers with color.
- I had already set a date for paint and did not want to cancel that.
- There are no oven painters nearby.
- I don't know anyone offhand who would polish the lips and doing it myself would require constructing a rig from scratch, which would most likely not happen before winter.
- There is a problem with painting rims only partly; most paint shops I've asked don't want to do it, and doing it myself would probably not be robust enough for winter use.
- 735 Astralsilver is the default color for Mercedes-Benz silver color wheels.
I got some used full metal valves for them from a friend. Before mounting them, I had to do a bit of a restoration job on the valves. I had a couple weeks to do that, since the clearcoat on the wheels will need to harden for 1-2 weeks before taking the wheels to a tyre shop.
The valve has a rubber O-ring on the inside. I gave it a silicone bath in order to freshen it up. This should minimize the risk of air leaks, after all the valves are used. |
I was pretty ecstatic with how the Pentas turned out:
Tires are GoodYear UltraGrip Ice+ 205/55 16" which I had bought previously for the BBS RS wheels.
There was a problem while mounting the tires. It turns out while restoring wheels you should always leave the hub unpainted. This is so obvious now, but I just didn't think of it. Neither did the sodablast guy, or the painter. So of course on two wheels' hubs there were uneven clearcoats with some bubbles as a bonus. This threw the balancing off and I had to scrape the bubbles off with a razor. Even so, two of the wheels were a bit more involved to balance. Oh well, you live and learn.
The wheels are straight, so they could be made perfect by grinding the clearcoat and paint off the hubs, but I think I'm going to live with the extra wheel weights, at least until the next set of tires. Driving home, the wheels had zero vibration.
Speaking of wheel weights, you might recall previously the wheels had knock-on weights on the outside rim. Since the wheels now look nice and shiny, I had the tire guy put glue weights on the inside. They are less visible to the outside, but more involved to get just right, and the glue can let go. I figured since I drive little over the winter, and slowly at that, I should be ok with glued weights.
The tires feel so good. It's hard to describe in a reasonable amount of text what a transformation the change from summers to frictions makes. Initially, I can put my finger on:
- The steering suddenly got very light and comfortable. It even feels more responsive. On a fast road (80 kph) even the tiniest correction on the wheel translated into a change of direction. It felt like changing tires took about 50 % or 75 % of slack off my steering gear. And boy, I can't emphasize too much how light the steering is now. You can literally steer the car with one finger whereas with the summers the steering feels somewhat heavy, definitely heavier than W124's I've driven.
- The frictions are much, much quieter. This is obvious but then there are some aspects to it that aren't immediately so. The frictions are quieter because the compound is softer. Thus the whole feel of the car, inside, is transformed. I notice way fewer rattles and sudden noises in the interior while driving on the frictions. Even driving over speed bumps or a rough asphalt spot, the car makes a soft thud, not... an edgy thud... it's really hard to describe but I definitely noticed this.
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