Being very pleased with the success of powder coating my 4-year-old Thermaltake Armor Jr case,
I decided to see if I can do some restoration of my Thermalright Ultra 120 heatsink as well.
It has taken a beating over the years, and is now showing obvious signs of corrosion. Even the protective surface layer is flaking off (especially after I cleaned it in a solution of Water, salt and vinegar)
It was to be sold a while back, but I couldn't find the AMD bracket. I have now decided to keep it and am in the process of importing a new bracket (along with some Articlean/Arctic Silver if you interested!)
SO after some research, I found one good solution:
ANODIZINGThe process is described here:
http://www.focuser.com/anodize.htmlHowever, for a DIY project this is no easy nor cheap process, mainly because I do not have a proper work area to follow all safety measures and I have no clue where to get proper anodizing dye in Trinidad (no, I not using no el cheapo cloth dye!).
I would have loved to convince my chemistry teacher co-workers to help me do this in the lab at school, but alas, I am on vacation for a few weeks yet.
So the next step is to ask my fellow GATTers if they have ever tried it, or can recommend a local company who willing to black-anodize my heatsink.
EDIT: If it turns out that I can't black-anodize my heatsink, then chrome-plating will have to do instead