This Mercedes-Benz came in with stock grey calipers hiding behind a set of AMG-style wheels, and left with a bold red finish on all four corners. Eddie and the team at Infinite Auto Works painted the calipers clean, and the result speaks for itself.
Vehicle: Mercedes-Benz Body Color White
Service: Professional Brake Caliper Painting
Caliper Color: Red (high-temperature caliper paint)
Goal: Visual upgrade that completes the wheel setup
Installer: Infinite Auto Works
Service Location: Concord, North Carolina
This Mercedes-Benz arrived at our Concord shop ready for a custom upgrade to the wheel area. The car sits on AMG-style multi-spoke alloys with a white body, and the factory grey calipers were the one detail holding the look back. A professional red caliper paint job was the right move to bring the full setup together.
Rather than a quick spray-and-go approach, our team took the time to inspect each caliper, assess the surface condition, and carry out proper prep work before any paint went on. The masking, the coat sequence, and the curing time were all handled the same way we would handle any detail job at our shop. The goal was a result that looks clean from every angle and holds up through regular driving and washing.
At Infinite Auto Works, every job is treated as its own project, whether it is a full PPF package or a single caliper color change. This owner wanted a visual upgrade that would complete the wheel look without changing anything mechanical on the car. Bold red, sharp edges, and a clean finish across all four corners was the goal, and that is what we delivered.
Stock grey calipers are designed for function, not looks, and on most vehicles that is fine. But when a Mercedes is sitting on multi-spoke AMG-style alloys with a white body, grey calipers are a missed opportunity. The wheels are doing the work, the body is doing the work, and the calipers are the one detail that can either pull the whole look together or let it down.
Red is the classic choice for a reason. It reads performance, it shows through the spokes clearly, and on a white car with black and silver wheels, the contrast is exactly right. The owner did not need to modify anything on the car mechanically to get this result. A set of freshly painted red calipers changed the look of the entire wheel setup without touching a single component underneath.
Beyond the visual upgrade, painted calipers are easier to keep clean. Brake dust sticks to bare metal and bare casting surfaces, and it builds up fast on any wheel that gets regular use. A proper caliper paint job gives that surface a sealed, smooth finish that wipes down more easily after every wash. For a daily driver like this Mercedes, that is a practical benefit as much as a cosmetic one.
Caliper painting looks simple from the outside, but the prep and masking work is what makes or breaks the final result. Here is exactly how we handled this job from start to finish.
We began by removing all four wheels to give us full, unobstructed access to each caliper. With the wheels off, every caliper was inspected closely for grease buildup, brake dust, corrosion, or any surface contamination that could affect paint adhesion. Each one was cleaned with a brake-safe degreaser and worked over with a detail brush to reach the fins, brackets, and recessed sections that a quick wipe-down would miss. The caliper surface has to be genuinely clean before any paint goes on, not just clean on the outside. This step is what determines whether the finish lasts.
With the calipers fully degreased, we masked off every surrounding component that needed protection during the painting process. Each brake rotor was covered with a fitted shield to protect the disc surface from overspray. The bleeder valve, brake line fittings, and caliper piston boots were all taped individually and checked before we moved forward. We also masked the surrounding knuckle and suspension hardware on each corner to keep the work area clean and controlled. Thorough masking at this stage is what gives a professional caliper paint job its sharp, clean finish rather than the rough, bled-out edges you see on a rushed job.
We applied the high-temperature red paint in a series of thin, even coats. After each coat was applied, we let it flash and partially set before the next one went on. This method builds up a durable, heat-resistant finish that holds up through regular braking. Rushing the coat sequence or going too thick creates a surface that looks fine at first but cracks or peels once it gets into real heat cycles. Three coats were completed on each caliper, giving a consistent, deep red across all four corners of the car.
After the final coat was applied, each caliper was allowed to cure fully before we touched anything. Curing time is not optional on a heat-exposed surface like a brake caliper. The paint needs time to harden and bond to the surface before the wheels go back on and the car is driven. We kept the calipers in position without interference throughout the curing window to make sure the finish set evenly without any soft spots, fingerprints, or pressure marks affecting the final result.
Once curing was confirmed, we pulled off all masking and did a close inspection of every caliper before the wheels went back on. We checked each corner for clean edges, even color, and no overspray on the rotor or nearby hardware. We also made sure all four calipers matched each other in finish and color before signing off. When everything passed, the wheels were reinstalled and the owner did a walkthrough with us before picking up the car.
The Mercedes left our shop looking noticeably sharper than when it arrived. The red calipers sit clean behind the AMG-style spokes, the edges are tight, and the finish is consistent across all four wheels. Nothing on the braking system was touched mechanically. The change is entirely cosmetic, and it makes a clear visual difference on a car that was already well put together.
This is one of those jobs where a single detail changes how the whole car reads. The white body, black and silver wheels, and red calipers work together in a way that looks intentional from the factory. The owner drove away happy, and Eddie and the team were glad to deliver a result worth talking about.
“Shout out to Eddie and the rest of the team at Infinite Auto Works. Caliper painting turned out great.”
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That kind of feedback is what we show up for. A clean result, a happy customer, and a car that looks better than it did when it came in, that is what every job at Infinite Auto Works is about.
Our team is licensed and insured with hands-on experience across caliper painting, ceramic coating, PPF, and window tinting. We take on fewer vehicles at a time so every job gets real attention. When your car comes to us, it is worked on by people who take the craft seriously and stand behind what they deliver.
We use professional-grade materials on every job. For caliper painting, we use high-temperature paint built to handle the heat that brake components go through during regular use. Using the right product for the job is how the work holds up over time.
Infinite Auto Works is a locally owned shop in Concord, NC, serving drivers across Concord, Charlotte, Harrisburg, and Kannapolis. We are part of this community, and we care about the reputation we build one job at a time.
We take time to understand what each customer actually wants before any work begins. Whether the job is a quick caliper color change or a full vehicle protection package, we walk through the options, answer every question, and make sure the service fits the vehicle and the owner’s goals. No pressure, no shortcuts, and no surprises when you come to pick up your car.
Ready to give your calipers a fresh look? Get in touch with Infinite Auto Works in Concord, NC for a free quote on caliper painting or any of our other customization and protection services. Call us or stop by in Concord, NC 28025.