Croming
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Most likely polished, it can be a time consuming maintenance issue to keep it looking good.
There are products that can make it last longer but no matter what you gonna be spending alot of time rubbing on it.
When I was young I used to rub on it all the time but as I get older it becomes more of a chore.
Back to the frame... yeah come to think of it there are products that can make that last longer too...
Ray
There are products that can make it last longer but no matter what you gonna be spending alot of time rubbing on it.
When I was young I used to rub on it all the time but as I get older it becomes more of a chore.
Back to the frame... yeah come to think of it there are products that can make that last longer too...
Ray
Polishing is very time consuming, and I wont keep up with it that much. Every few weeks just rub it down with some wadding polish and a clean rag. When I tore the machine down, I figured why not while I had everything apart. I just used some aluminum polish and #000 steel wool. MAYBE I spent 2-3 hours total on the frame and swingarm. It is by no means show polished, just more clean looking then the bare aluminum.
As for powdercoating, I used to run a small PC shop. Sure you could PC the frame, however over time it will start to chip from rocks, etc and the aluminum will show through. You will need to have it re-coated to keep a perfect appearance every few years. The downfall is the removal of the PC. You will need to chemical strip it then sandblast. Most powdercoating is removed by a burn-off oven then a light sand blast to remove the ash left over. That is done at a temp 800 degrees and higher. Not good for a heat treated aluminum frame. The heavy sandblasting and chemical stripping will need to be done VERY carefully as to not get any inside the spars that will ruin the motor in short order. If the bare polished aluminum gets roosted by a rock the finish will look identical and surely not as noticable as if it were powdercoated a different color than silver. .
You can go either route, but what looks more trick than a bare frame? I have people constantly coming up to me at the races and the bike gets many people stopping asking "what the heck is that?"
As for powdercoating, I used to run a small PC shop. Sure you could PC the frame, however over time it will start to chip from rocks, etc and the aluminum will show through. You will need to have it re-coated to keep a perfect appearance every few years. The downfall is the removal of the PC. You will need to chemical strip it then sandblast. Most powdercoating is removed by a burn-off oven then a light sand blast to remove the ash left over. That is done at a temp 800 degrees and higher. Not good for a heat treated aluminum frame. The heavy sandblasting and chemical stripping will need to be done VERY carefully as to not get any inside the spars that will ruin the motor in short order. If the bare polished aluminum gets roosted by a rock the finish will look identical and surely not as noticable as if it were powdercoated a different color than silver. .
You can go either route, but what looks more trick than a bare frame? I have people constantly coming up to me at the races and the bike gets many people stopping asking "what the heck is that?"
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QUOTE (kdeal @ Jun 30 2007, 12:49 AM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}>
Me too! (actually Haydug did it)
[attachment=4042:red_quad_4.jpg]
[attachment=4042:red_quad_4.jpg]
now i got to get the p-c both of theose frames look sexy as ****
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QUOTE (440speedkid @ Jun 30 2007, 02:39 AM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}>
now i got to get the p-c both of theose frames look sexy as ****