Kremmen
Registered user
What are you going to do for the next 18 months of your life?
You know that already...I PM you..
What are you going to do for the next 18 months of your life?
...... like it had just been rolled in the foundry.![]()

You know that already...I PM you..

Nope, we don't 'blast' anything. We use a range of chemical cleaners developed for us to deep clean any residual road dirt, corrosive material and road salt off the bike. Thats followed by a foam cleaner to strip off any old wax or protective coatings. We use a pressure washer in a proper controlled way to ensure the bike is thoroughly rinsed. After this we should be down to clean metal ready for the ACF50 application to 'polar bond' properly.OKso you pay someone to blast your bike clean getting water into every orifice that probably has never had water in it before
We use a £200 professional bike dryer, so it's a pretty good fashion.get it dried to a fashion
ricdunn answered that one, he's read the bottle.then have it vapourised with ACF50,an alls protected,trapped moisture an all maybe in all the wrong places
Why on earth would you want to wash off again in spring? It's a twelve month protective coating. You seem to have the mistaken idea that corrosion only happens in winter and magically disappears come spring. Winter conditions accelerate it, but believe me, corrosion is an all year problem.an come spring you then wash all you can see off(best you can)
'Atomising' the ACF50 delivers it deep into the bike, so no need to strip it down. It also helps to apply the correct thickness of coating to those areas. This system was developed by the manufacturers, Lear Chemicals (incidentally they're Canadian which is why some of the labeling is in French). Most people apply 100 - 200 TIMES more ACF50 than is necessary, it's an 'active' chemical coating as indicated by the fact that it has a two year shelf life, after which you should bin it. It's effective at a coating thickness of 2/1,000 inch, much thicker than that and it'll just congeal and trap any road dirt or salt thrown up on it while riding.vapourising puts a thinner coat on surely??
Actually in the late '70s the US Navy put a tender out for companies to come up with a solution to the corrosion problems they were having with jets. Lear Chemicals with ACF50 was one of several who responded. After the first years trials ACF50 was reported as reducing corrosion related problems by over 60% and was adopted, along with the delivery system. Since then the product has undergone more R&D and is even more effective now.ACF-50 was devised by on on behalf or the US navy for aircraft on carriers,
I'm not trying to plug our service, we don't do super sales pitches and marketing hype, the majority of our business comes from word of mouth and reputation. It's there if you want it, but if you want to tackle your bike yourself then great, get in touch if you need info and I'll try and answer any questions you have and help if possible. I just wanted to clear up some of these issues about what we do and more importantly how ACF50 is used.



We have guys who come back after 12 months and have done nothing to their bikes during that time other than a quick rinse down once in a while. Once the craps washed off bike still comes up looking good.So how many tossers leave all that salt,road crap dust,mud and anything else thatll stick to it in 12 months on then or do you wash it all off come spring???