How to Tell If Your Alloy Wheels Need Refurbishing (And What Happens If You Ignore It)
Your tyres get checked. Your brakes get checked. Your oil gets changed. But alloy wheels? They tend to get ignored until they look genuinely embarrassing or start causing a real problem.
The truth is, damaged alloys are more than a cosmetic issue. Kerb rash, corrosion, and buckles can affect how your car handles, how your tyres wear, and whether your car passes its MOT. Here is what to look out for and what your options are when something needs to be done.
What Actually Happens to Alloy Wheels Over Time?
Most damage falls into one of a few categories.
Kerb rash is the most common. It happens when a wheel scrapes a kerb while parking. The scratches and scuffs look bad, but more importantly they remove the protective coating that stops moisture getting into the alloy underneath.
Corrosion follows from there. Once the coating is broken, water gets in and the metal starts to corrode. You will see this as white or grey bubbling on the surface. Left alone, it spreads.
Buckles happen on impact. Hitting a deep pothole or a raised kerb at speed can deform the metal, creating a wobble you can feel through the steering wheel. A buckled wheel puts uneven stress on your tyre and can cause a blowout if severe enough.
Cracks are the most serious. A cracked alloy can leak air and compromises the structural integrity of the wheel. It is not something to drive on.
Signs You Should Not Ignore
Vibrations through the steering wheel or floor can mean a buckled wheel. Tyres that repeatedly lose pressure without an obvious puncture can indicate a crack or corrosion breaking the rim seal. Visible bubbling on the wheel face means corrosion has already taken hold. Any of these needs attention.
What Are Your Options?
For light cosmetic damage, a spot repair and repaint can handle most kerb rash. For anything more serious, a full wheel refurbishment london strips the wheel entirely, repairs the damage, and refinishes it from scratch.
Two finishes dominate the refurbishment market. Diamond cutting mounts the wheel on a lathe and removes a very thin layer of metal from the face, producing that bright, machined look that many modern alloys have from the factory. A clear lacquer goes on afterwards to protect it. Powder coating applies a dry powder electrostatically and bakes it at high temperature to create a hard, chip-resistant finish available in a wide range of colours. Both are considerably more durable than a basic repaint.
Buckled wheels can usually be straightened at a specialist workshop using hydraulic equipment, and cracked wheels can sometimes be welded depending on the location and severity of the crack.
Does It Matter Where You Go?
Yes. The quality of the preparation work underneath is what separates a finish that lasts from one that starts peeling within months.
A fixed workshop with a proper lathe and curing oven will generally produce better results than a mobile unit. It is also worth asking about warranties. A reputable wheel refurbishment london specialist should be confident enough in their work to back it with a guarantee.
The Resale Angle
Buyers notice alloy condition immediately. A set of clean, refurbished wheels can significantly improve a car’s kerb appeal and remove an easy bargaining point from a buyer’s hands. The cost of refurbishment per wheel is almost always less than the discount a buyer will push for when the wheels look rough. It is one of the better pre-sale investments you can make.
Most alloy damage can be repaired or reversed. The key is not waiting until it becomes a safety issue.
The post How to Tell If Your Alloy Wheels Need Refurbishing (And What Happens If You Ignore It) appeared first on My Car Heaven.
