sk8mutie
Registered user
BR, all I had was corrosion on the front braided brake hose and a few people suggested I look around the bike, and the more I looked, the more I found.
I gave the bike a good dousing in ACF before as soon as I picked it up last winter and every few days, it gets soaked in WD, so up under the fuel tank and on wiring looms etc etc are grimey, but if you wipe them, you can see the ACF is doing its job.
The bubbling paintwork....well, as a marine engineer who has to deal with the meeting of most machinery components and salt water, once there's an opening to the elements, then there's going to be corrosion. Even if the bikes are kept dry, if there's a way in for oxygen, then there's going to bubbling under the paintwork in due course.
As Karlread says, some lacquer around the edges would be a good plan.
In the marine engineering environment, any piece of equipment that goes off for overhaul comes back having been spray painted....and I mean everywhere (electrics, sight glasses, unions...the lot) with thick, marine grade paint. It's an absolute nightmare when it comes to maintenance, but up until the point that the seal on the paint gets broken, there is no corrosion. So the fact the bike parts are painted, then machined....never gonna not corrode!!
I have to say, the oxidisation, if it occurs again on any new parts I get, is something I'm just going to have to live with. It'll take some time for it to affect the performance of any component, so it will be more of an aesthetic problem, but a problem nonetheless.
Such a shame though, that this has the potential of driving some of us away from the marque.
sk8mutie
I gave the bike a good dousing in ACF before as soon as I picked it up last winter and every few days, it gets soaked in WD, so up under the fuel tank and on wiring looms etc etc are grimey, but if you wipe them, you can see the ACF is doing its job.
The bubbling paintwork....well, as a marine engineer who has to deal with the meeting of most machinery components and salt water, once there's an opening to the elements, then there's going to be corrosion. Even if the bikes are kept dry, if there's a way in for oxygen, then there's going to bubbling under the paintwork in due course.
As Karlread says, some lacquer around the edges would be a good plan.
In the marine engineering environment, any piece of equipment that goes off for overhaul comes back having been spray painted....and I mean everywhere (electrics, sight glasses, unions...the lot) with thick, marine grade paint. It's an absolute nightmare when it comes to maintenance, but up until the point that the seal on the paint gets broken, there is no corrosion. So the fact the bike parts are painted, then machined....never gonna not corrode!!
I have to say, the oxidisation, if it occurs again on any new parts I get, is something I'm just going to have to live with. It'll take some time for it to affect the performance of any component, so it will be more of an aesthetic problem, but a problem nonetheless.
Such a shame though, that this has the potential of driving some of us away from the marque.
sk8mutie


