With my builds, I feel that every great car starts out with a great set of wheels...something distinctive and different, if possible. I acquired 2 full sets of Sees wheels for this car; 4 rears and a pair of fronts that were NIP and 2 gently used fronts. I know most vintage purists would cry "Sacrilege!" at the very thought of deanodizing the gold off of these wheels, but even as decent as they look, brand-new, right out of the bags, they just don't "pop". I don't like the time and elbow grease needed to polish aluminum bits, but you can't beat the look; it's classy without having that cheap chrome "bling". So I rolled up my sleeves--right up to the elbows. I chose the lightly-used fronts for the deanodize/polish job, they had a few very small, barely visible rim scuffs. I left the NIP fronts with the gold anodize alone.
Original NIP Sees wheels, just as a memento in case disaster struck...
After my usual deanodizing method, a light spray & soak in Easy Off HD Oven Cleaner, then brushing off with a toothbrush.
And voilà, after a good 3 hours or so of light wet-sanding with 1000-grit followed by polishing compound, and after I felt everything was quite consistent, a final work-over with a soft polishing wheel drill-bit and Nu-Finish Scratch & Swirl Remover. I'll be honest - the fronts were a pain in the ass, trying to figure out ways to polish the 5 divots representing the lug nuts, and even worse--the little recesses they were in. At first, I wasn't planning to do that, but it just looked like a half-assed lazy job with part of the wheel inners not shiny like the faces & rims. But if you're gonna spend hours doing something, might as well do it right.
With original NIP front wheels for a comparison of the end results:
Now, work begins on the rears, but their faces are flat, no recesses, so it should be a breeze compared to the fronts.