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Custom Electroplating Services

Get custom electroplating services for prototypes and production parts, with controlled coating processes, precision inspection, and engineering support. Upload your drawings or CAD files to receive a fast quotation, coating recommendations, and global delivery for electroplated parts.

What Is Electroplating?

Electroplating is an electrochemical metal finishing process that uses direct current (DC) to deposit a thin metallic coating onto the surface of a substrate. The process improves critical surface properties, including corrosion resistance, wear resistance, electrical conductivity, hardness, solderability, and decorative appearance, while preserving the mechanical properties of the base material. Common electroplated parts include automotive fasteners, electronic connectors, medical instruments, aerospace components, and precision-machined parts.

The electroplating process relies on four key elements: an anode, a cathode, an electrolyte solution, and an electrical power source. During electrolysis, metal ions dissolved in the electrolyte migrate toward the cathode and form a controlled metallic layer through a redox reaction. Depending on the performance requirement, manufacturers can apply coatings of nickel, zinc, copper, chrome, gold, silver, tin, or palladium to meet specific performance, environmental, and application requirements.

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What Types of Electroplating Does HRCCNC Offer?

HRCCNC offers rack, barrel, brush, pulse, and reel-to-reel electroplating to accommodate different part sizes, production volumes, coating requirements, and performance objectives. The most suitable process depends on factors such as part geometry, coating thickness requirements, surface finish expectations, production efficiency, and cost targets.

Rack Plating

Rack Electroplating

Rack electroplating secures individual parts onto specialized racks before immersion in the electrolyte bath. This method provides precise current distribution and coating control, making it suitable for large, delicate, or complex components that require uniform coating thickness and high-quality surface finishes. Aerospace components, medical devices, and precision-machined parts commonly use rack plating.

Barrel Plating

Barrel Electroplating

Barrel electroplating places small parts inside a rotating plastic or rubber barrel during the plating process. This method efficiently plates high volumes of fasteners, stamped parts, washers, pins, and connectors at a lower cost per part. Barrel plating offers excellent production efficiency for bulk manufacturing, although coating uniformity is generally lower than that of rack plating.

Brush Plating

Brush Electroplating

Brush electroplating applies the coating directly to a localized area using a handheld anode wrapped with absorbent material saturated with electrolyte solution. This process is ideal for repairing worn surfaces and restoring dimensional tolerances without requiring full immersion of the component. Maintenance, repair, and refurbishment applications frequently use brush plating.

Silver Electroplating

Reel-To-Reel Electroplating

Reel-to-reel electroplating continuously plates metal strips, wires, and stamped components as they move through a series of processing stations. This automated process delivers high production speeds, consistent coating quality, and efficient material handling for electronic connectors, lead frames, terminals, and telecommunications components. It is particularly suited to selective plating applications, such as gold-tipped contact surfaces, where precise deposition on high-volume parts is essential.

Pulse Plating

Pulse Electroplating

Pulse electroplating uses controlled electrical pulses rather than continuous direct current for metal deposition. The pulsed current produces a finer grain structure, higher coating density, improved adhesion, and greater wear resistance compared with conventional DC plating. Manufacturers often select pulse plating for high-performance components that require superior surface properties and precise coating control.

Which Metals Can HRCCNC Apply as a Coating?

HRCCNC applies nickel, zinc, copper, chrome, gold, silver, tin, and palladium coatings to meet specific requirements for corrosion resistance, wear resistance, electrical conductivity, solderability, and surface appearance. Each plating metal offers distinct performance characteristics and is selected based on the substrate material, operating environment, and end-use application.

Nickel Electroplating

Nickel

Nickel electroplating produces a hard, corrosion-resistant coating that improves durability, adhesion, and surface finish. It is commonly used for automotive trim, machinery components, kitchen utensils, and precision parts. Nickel accepts a bright polished finish and is frequently applied as an undercoat for chrome plating, combining wear resistance with corrosion protection. It provides lower electrical conductivity than copper, silver, or gold.

Zinc Electroplating

Zinc

Zinc electroplating is widely used on steel parts because it provides sacrificial corrosion protection. Zinc coatings corrode before the underlying substrate, preventing rust in outdoor and high-moisture environments. Fasteners, brackets, stamped parts, and automotive hardware commonly use zinc plating, often combined with chromate conversion coatings for additional protection. Zinc plating is cost-effective, though it offers lower hardness than nickel or chrome.

Copper Electroplating

Copper

Copper electroplating delivers excellent electrical conductivity and strong layer-to-layer adhesion, making it widely used in electronics, connectors, and printed circuit boards. It also serves as a base layer for nickel or gold plating, and its malleability allows smooth, uniform coverage on complex geometries. Because copper oxidizes over time, a secondary protective coating is typically applied.

Chrome Electroplating

Chrome

Chrome electroplating creates a hard, glossy, scratch-resistant finish that improves both appearance and wear resistance. Decorative chrome is used on automotive parts, bathroom fixtures, and consumer products; hard chrome is applied to industrial components subject to friction and mechanical wear. Both typically rely on a nickel underlayer for adhesion and corrosion protection.

Gold Electroplating

Gold

Gold electroplating provides exceptional electrical conductivity, corrosion resistance, and decorative appeal. It is widely used for electronic connectors, aerospace components, jewelry, and telecommunications equipment, where signal reliability is critical. Coating thickness varies by application, with thin layers used in electronics and thicker layers used for decorative products. The primary limitation is the higher material cost relative to other plating metals.

Silver Electroplating

Silver

Silver electroplating offers the highest electrical conductivity of all plating metals and produces a bright, reflective finish. It is commonly used for electrical contacts, RF components, mirrors, tableware, and musical instruments. Its conductivity makes it particularly valuable in electronics and telecommunications. Although silver can tarnish over time, protective lacquer coatings reduce surface discoloration.

Tin Electroplating

Tin

Tin electroplating produces a non-toxic, corrosion-resistant, and highly solderable coating used on electrical components, connectors, hardware, and food containers. It remains fully compatible with soldering processes, making it a common choice in consumer electronics and food-grade packaging. Tin plating is cost-effective for high-volume production, though some electronic applications require additional controls to minimize tin whisker formation.

Palladium Electroplating

Palladium

Palladium electroplating is a durable, corrosion-resistant alternative to gold, commonly used in electronics, medical devices, jewelry, and high-reliability connectors. It provides excellent wear resistance, stable electrical performance, and high-temperature durability at a lower cost than gold. Palladium is biocompatible and is commonly used in medical instruments, diagnostic devices, and high-reliability electronic components requiring corrosion resistance and stable electrical performance.

What Are the Key Benefits Of Electroplating?

The key benefits of electroplating include corrosion resistance, sacrificial protection, wear resistance, improved surface durability, friction reduction, electrical conductivity, thermal reflectivity, improved appearance, cost efficiency, plating on plastics, and dimensional restoration. These advantages help extend component lifespan, improve performance, and reduce maintenance or replacement costs across industrial applications.

What Are the Limitations Of Electroplating?

The main limitations of electroplating include coating thickness variations, hydrogen embrittlement, substrate constraints, environmental concerns, processing time, and higher production costs. Although electroplating improves surface performance, process control and compliance requirements can increase manufacturing complexity and cost.

Non-Uniform Coating Thickness

Complex geometries can result in uneven current distribution, leading to thicker deposits along edges and thinner coatings in recessed areas.

Electroplating improves surface properties but does not significantly alter the substrate’s core mechanical properties.

Hydrogen absorbed during plating can make certain high-strength steels brittle and more susceptible to cracking if not properly treated.

Conventional electroplating requires a conductive surface, making it more difficult to plate non-metallic materials without special preparation.

Electroplating processes use chemicals and metal salts that require proper treatment and disposal to minimize environmental impact.

Improper handling of plating waste can contaminate water, soil, and the surrounding environment with hazardous substances.

Operators must manage exposure to chemicals, fumes, and electrical equipment through controlled safety procedures.

Surface preparation, plating, rinsing, inspection, and post-treatment steps can increase overall production lead time.

Equipment, chemical management, wastewater treatment, energy consumption, and quality control contribute to operational expenses.

Precious metals such as gold and palladium, along with thicker coating requirements, can significantly increase project costs.

What Are the Steps in the Electroplating Process?

HRCCNC follows a structured electroplating process that prepares the substrate, deposits the coating, verifies quality, and delivers finished parts. Every step influences coating adhesion, thickness uniformity, corrosion resistance, and long-term performance.

What Factors Affect Electroplating Quality?

Surface preparation, bath composition, pH control, temperature, electrical parameters, and post-treatment directly affect electroplating quality. Even small variations in these factors can cause poor adhesion, uneven coating thickness, rough surfaces, or reduced coating performance.

Which Industries Does HRCCNC Serve For Electroplating?

HRCCNC provides electroplating services for aerospace, automotive, electronics, telecommunications, medical, dental, jewelry, power generation, and prototyping applications. Our electroplating solutions enhance corrosion and wear resistance, conductivity, and surface performance for components operating in demanding environments.

Why Choose HRCCNC For Electroplating Services?

Choose HRCCNC for electroplating services to access precision coating capabilities, along with CNC machining and surface finishing, all under one roof. Since 2008, we have supported global manufacturers with controlled electroplating processes across nickel, zinc, copper, chrome, gold, silver, tin, and palladium coatings, fast quotation turnaround, free DFM support, and strict quality control. Our team manages coating thickness, bath chemistry, current density, and post-treatment requirements to help reduce supplier complexity, shorten lead times, and maintain consistent coating performance for both prototypes and production orders.

Industry Standards and Compliance

HRCCNC follows international and industry standards for electroplating, including ASTM B633 (Zinc), ASTM B733 (Autocatalytic Electroless Nickel-Phosphorus Coatings), ASTM B456 (Gold), ASTM B700 (Silver), ASTM B488 (Gold for Engineering Uses), ASTM B571 (Adhesion Testing), ISO 2081, ISO 4520, MIL-DTL-26074, RoHS, and REACH compliance.

How Does Electroplating Differ From Electroforming?

Electroplating is a process that deposits a thin metal coating onto an existing part, while electroforming is a process that creates the metal part itself by building layers of metal onto a mold or mandrel. Both processes use electrolysis, but electroplating focuses on improving surface properties such as corrosion resistance, wear resistance, conductivity, and appearance, whereas electroforming produces free-standing metal structures with fine details and complex geometries.

FactorElectroplatingElectroforming
DefinitionDeposits a thin metal coating onto an existing part to improve surface properties.Builds a standalone metal component by depositing metal onto a mold or mandrel.
Primary GoalImprove corrosion resistance, wear resistance, conductivity, or appearance.Create a fully formed metal part with precise dimensions and complex geometry.
Target ObjectAn existing substrate such as steel, aluminum, brass, copper, or plastic.A temporary mold, mandrel, or pattern that is removed after forming.
Layer Thickness0.1 to 500 microns, depending on coating type and application. Decorative coatings typically range from 0.1 to 2.5 microns; hard chrome for industrial tooling can reach up to 500 microns.Ranges from tens of microns to several millimeters. Micro- electroformed components for medical and microelectronic applications may achieve wall thicknesses as low as tens of microns
Final ResultProduces a coated part while retaining the original base material.Produces a free-standing metal structure after mandrel removal.
Process MethodDeposits a metallic layer through electrolysis onto a conductive surface.Continuously deposits metal until the required part thickness is achieved.
ApplicationsAutomotive trim, fasteners, electronic connectors, tools, medical devices, and industrial components.Aerospace waveguides, RF filters, micro-needles, precision nozzles, microfluidic components, and optical components.
Precision & ComplexityPrimarily improves the surface of an existing component. Produces fine details, sharp edges, and complex geometries that are difficult to achieve with traditional machining methods.
AdvantagesCost-effective, widely available, and improves base material performance without changing the core structure.High precision, excellent mold surface replication, and the ability to create lightweight yet strong metal structures.
CostLower due to thinner coatings and shorter processing times.Higher because it creates the entire component through metal deposition.

FAQs About Electroplating Services

Is Electroplating Environmentally Friendly?

Electroplating can be performed in an environmentally responsible manner when facilities implement proper chemical handling, wastewater treatment, emissions control, and regulatory compliance programs. Modern operations replace hexavalent chrome with trivalent chrome processes and recover precious metals from spent bath solutions. Compliance with RoHS, REACH, and local discharge regulations is standard in certified facilities.

Common electroplating metals include nickel, zinc, copper, chrome, gold, silver, tin, and palladium. Nickel and chrome improve wear resistance, zinc provides sacrificial corrosion protection, copper improves conductivity and adhesion, gold and silver enhance signal transmission, tin improves solderability, and palladium offers a cost-effective alternative to gold in high-reliability connectors.

Electroplating uses direct current, an anode, a cathode, and an electrolyte solution to deposit a thin metallic coating onto a substrate. When current is applied, metal ions in the electrolyte migrate toward the cathode and bond to the surface of the part through a redox reaction. Coating thickness and quality are controlled by adjusting current density, bath chemistry, and plating duration.

Gold electroplating provides exceptional electrical conductivity, corrosion resistance, tarnish resistance, and stable contact performance. It is widely used for electronic connectors, RF components, aerospace assemblies, and medical devices where reliable signal transmission and long-term surface integrity are critical.

Coating thickness varies by metal and application. Decorative gold and silver coatings typically range from 0.1 to 2.5 microns, nickel from 5 to 15 microns, and zinc from 5 to 25 microns. Hard chrome for industrial tooling and hydraulic components can reach 25 to 500 microns, depending on wear requirements.

Surface preparation, bath composition, pH, temperature, current density, plating duration, and post-treatment all directly affect coating quality. Poor control of any factor can cause adhesion failures, uneven thickness, or surface defects. Consistent results require monitoring bath chemistry and applying the correct post-plating treatments for each coating type.

Yes, aluminum can be electroplated effectively with proper surface preparation. Because aluminum forms a natural oxide layer that prevents adhesion, a zincate pre-treatment is applied first to create a zinc interlayer. Nickel, copper, chrome, and other coatings can then be reliably deposited to improve corrosion and wear resistance and surface finish.

Aerospace, automotive, electronics, telecommunications, medical, dental, jewelry, and power generation industries commonly use electroplating. Applications range from MIL- SPEC connectors and fasteners in aerospace, zinc-nickel coatings on automotive underbody components, gold and palladium on electronic connectors, to corrosion- resistant and biocompatible coatings used on medical instruments and surgical devices.

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