Post
by Dr. Frankenstein » Wed Jul 14, 2010 10:06 pm
Hey, brewski, you're doing what I'm doing to my CA77...I got a couple cans of Rustoleum Aircraft Remover, some self-etching primer and primer/sealer and went at it...I have (so far) taken the finish off to bare metal, then hit it with the etching primer; my next step is to sand it with some 1000 grit, hit it with the primer/sealer, sand it, then paint it - and I'm doing it all with spray cans! :0
I can feel folks grimacing as we speak...:)
Well, actually I DO have a Harbor Freight HVLP gun I'm thinking of doing the frame with, and probably will because of it's size; but as of now, I have the tank, headlight housing, fender and swingarm primed; the forks and frame are next...and it looks dang good, too! The secret (I believe) is to prep the hell out of it - the aircraft remover is nasty stuff, but it works, and a lot faster than a blaster (which I don't have). I have also found that Gumout carb /choke cleaner does a pretty good job of liquefying the base coat, or what's left after the remover does its job, although it takes a lot of it...and I of course try not to breathe it (ANY of it!) in; make sure there's a bit of a breeze, or walk away from it to breathe...
The only thing I have left to strip is the frame, and that will take some time, I expect...but I too am probably going to use Rustoleum gloss white to paint mine with, and probably with the HVLP gun. I'm not trying to make it 'factory-fresh' or anything like that; I just have a good time working on it. And it will probably be a '10-footer', but I don't care. The bike was made 46 years ago. This is not 1964. But I DO know the white headlight casing I have painted so far looks really good! And quarts of Rustoleum are cheap..although I may not skimp on the clear-coat, if the paint comes out the way I want it to...
Spray away, and have fun!
-John