Allowing that you clean the metal correctly and use the correct primer.
Yes, you can, this is an excellent base for sticking to.
Solvent based.
You could give it a shot. Try using a spray paint for plastic. Or, use a multipurpose primer to adhere to the cove base. If the adheres ok, you are able to use a regular latex paint.
It will not last very long. Much better to use a full enamel spray or an epoxy base.
Try WD40 spray it on a soft cloth and gently rub the paint. Let the WD40 work to soften the paint over spray. WD40 is a solvent and a cleaner as well as a penetrating oil. It may take some time to get it all off just go slow and don't damage the finish of the car. Good Luck!
After application, Spray water on it using a spray bottle or water hose.
Yes, you can, this is an excellent base for sticking to.
Solvent based.
I would, if it's worth painting, it's worth doing properly. -Paint it with an auto spray primer, easy, and gives your finish a good base.
Gold-tone over base metal is not the same as gold. Silver-tone over base metal is not the same thing as silver. Many base metals are used to make jewelry, and they are often coated with paint to make it look like gold or silver, but once the paint wears off, the metal can react with the skin and turn it green. This is especially true of jewelry that is made of copper and then coated with paint. Copper reacts to the sweat in a person's skin, and turns green. Gold-filled and gold-plated jewelry may also have certain base metals that react with a person's skin. The same is true of silver-plated and silver-filled. Sterling silver, Bali silver and such are not reactive and should not turn the skin green. Gold should not turn the skin green. Electroplate is another way of fusing gold or silver to base metal, and it is very durable, but if the plating ever cracks, the base metal could be reactive with the skin. The way to avoid purchasing something that will turn your skin green is to check for the tiny stamp imprinted on gold (it will tell how many carats of gold the jewelry is made of) and sterling silver (it will say sterling, and perhaps be accompanied by some numbers).
You could give it a shot. Try using a spray paint for plastic. Or, use a multipurpose primer to adhere to the cove base. If the adheres ok, you are able to use a regular latex paint.
None. Alpaca silver is another name for nickel silver which is a base metal alloy of copper with zinc and/or nickel.
Sterling silver is silver that is 92.5% pure with the rest being a base metal, most commonly copper.
It will not last very long. Much better to use a full enamel spray or an epoxy base.
Sterling silver contains a little over 7% copper and silver plate often has a base of copper or an alloy containing copper. Copper corrosion and some copper salts are green, as in the popular verdegris patina on outdoor copper scupture or roofing. I have found green corrosion on some of my silver plate, which I believe is copper sulfate and due to the reaction of sulphur compounds (found in many foods and also found in newspaper, so don't pack silver in newspaper!) with copper exposed by the wearing away of the silver plate.
There are quite a few examples of silver plated items. Some of these being pure copper base, copper zinc brass, cupronickel, German silver, and pure nickel.
Try WD40 spray it on a soft cloth and gently rub the paint. Let the WD40 work to soften the paint over spray. WD40 is a solvent and a cleaner as well as a penetrating oil. It may take some time to get it all off just go slow and don't damage the finish of the car. Good Luck!