Got a picture of the finished items Sploo?
Sure...
I started with a box of white vinegar and a little salt, and two strips of nickel:
Over a period of several hours the nickel anode strip slowly dissolved into the solution. I understand the black dots left in the bottom are the tiny percentage of the material that isn't pure nickel. Apparently some people put the anode into a mesh cloth to keeps the particles out of the solution:
Small items plated quite well (in the second photo below, the left knob is plated, the one on the right isn't). Both were cleaned with a wire wheel then washed in white spirit:
I notice that sharp edges and protruding areas "pick up" more than others (likely to do with how the current flows through the solution):
I later bought some more nickel strips in order to get a more even coverage, and with the voltage set a bit too high it certainly stirs the solution up (the bottles were just there to raise the level of the solution in the tub):
Some more plating of small items:
As noted, the small items plate fairly well; though there are still issues of uneven coverage and staining; possibly due to the shape, possibly due to me not cleaning the parts sufficiently:
The body itself wasn't great; the "protruding" areas that saw the most activity (bubbling) sometimes have the coating flake off:
The base was pretty good, but again flaked on the edges:
My take home from the above is that you'll likely get better results if the parts are really smooth (I didn't want to go crazy with a sander on a 100+ year old plane), and I probably should have been more thorough with several stages of cleaning and drying.
I've heard that some people use a magnetic stirrer to agitate the solution (for more even coverage). I wasn't going to try that as apparently the little black bits in the solution can get caught on a part and then covered. Had I got a cloth "sock" on the anode that wouldn't be a problem.
I read something about the required current per unit area of parts, and whilst I could easily do that with a bench supply on the smaller parts, the plane body was beyond what I could deliver. However; seeing how aggressive the bubbling could be I do wonder if a lower current and a really long time (and plenty of stirring/turning) would work better.
One final thing: a vinegar + salt solution is really corrosive; any metal used in the area will rust really quickly. It actually "ate" a small chunk out of the bottom of my power supply's metal cover - so be careful.