Hey, I have a LOT of experience filling holes. The REAL way the masters do it is the way I do it. You must buy an EXACT match drum shell to make wood plugs out of. Go to home depot/lowes or any hardware store and get a drill bit for making wood plugs. You need a drill press to get perfectly straight holes, or a lot of concentration, practice, and a steady hand. If the shell is a match you barely need to sand, just glue the wood plug into the shell with wood glue and sand flat, which if the shell is a perfect match, you can do by hand.
The re-chroming all comes down to cost. If you are on a budget, use Whink rust remover, and if its not too bad a super concentrated solution of dawn dish soap and Bon Ami. Brand name cleaners are very importand when cleaning drums. You must use the correct brand name cleaner, glue, tool, etc if you want good results. Most cleaning products arnt made to clean vintage drums.
If you want an amazing chrome job and can do it yourself heres a sight that sells chrome plating kits pretty damn cheap. http://www.caswellplating.com/kits/
I love there stuff, the electro-less plating kit works super and at an awsome price. Because lugs are small you can get away with buying the smallest amount of chroming solution.
If you want to chrome a shell, dont. The drum companies have specially formulated chroming solutions. Not every chrome job is the same. It will affect the drums look and especially sound.
Any more questions my email direct is [email]mattkinel@hotmail.com[/email]
The chroming im not an expert on, but I am an expert at hole plugging. Im in the middle of a Bonham Green Sparkle kit conversion/restoration job. Ive plugged 34 holes on 2 drums and because I used the correct era matching ludwig shell to make the wood plugs, there is NO affect on the sound. DO NOT USE A DOWELL OR ANY OLD PIECE OF WOOD!!! You really need a donor shell from ebay with a matching date. Please dont try and save a buck by using any old wood, it wont work, I learned it the hard way on my first hole plugging and I ruined an entire drumset.
-Matt Kinel