Conservation, History, Significance

What does our Conservation team think: conservation not restoration

by Monica Lindemann on 19 April, 2013

Below you can see four additional petrol caps are used to illustrate the type of effect you would get from each treatment.

1. Would you treat the rust spots with tannic acid to prevent further rust?

This would  not be the preferred option for conservation because tannic acid stops rust but changes the object’s appearance.

2. Would you paint over the pitted chrome with silver paint?

No, this would change the object’s appearance and painting over doesn’t stop rust.

3. Would you strip off damaged chrome and re-chrome the object?

No, we wouldn’t do this as part of a conservation treatment. Removing the chrome would remove historical evidence about the object.

4. Would you clean the chrome carefully to remove corrosion products and polish gently with a microfiber cloth?

Yes. This is the preferred approach of the Museum’s conservation team and is what we have done with the Royal Daimler petrol cap.

1 thought on “What does our Conservation team think: conservation not restoration”

  1. Great to read about the conservation steps being used on the Royal Daimler project. Looking forward to the Illawarra Vintage Car Club’s visit later this year to view the project and meet some of the conservators. Keep up the great work!
    Vic Weir

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