There's that fifth paragraph in http://www.uesp.net/wiki/Morrowind:The_Ruins_of_Kemel-Ze.
I laughed to myself, thinking of the many warriors unwittingly walking around Tamriel with pieces of Dwarven mechanisms on their backs. For that, of course, is what most "Dwarven armor" really is - just the armored shells of ancient mechanical men. [...] Most Dwarven armor is made of mismatched pieces from various devices, hence its reputation for being bulky and unwieldy. But a matched set from an intact mechanism is worth more than its weight in gold, for the pieces all fit together smoothly and the wearer hardly notices the bulk
Granted, the man was a scholar, passions/obsessions more like Edwinna Elbert. Just want a working machine.
I sobered when I thought of how exceedingly valuable an intact mechanism would be. This place was obviously full of Dwarven devices, judging from the litter covering the floor of this vast chamber - or had been, I reminded myself. Looters had been working over this site for centuries. Just the casing alone would be worth a small fortune, sold as armor.
Then, I would point to that orc blacksmith Garothmuk gro-Muzgub in Morrowind's town Suran. I haven't checked if he actually says something like "from scraps of centurion plating" though. No promises.