R1200s timing cover repaint
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R1200s timing cover repaint
The paint on the timing cover of my recently purchased R1200s ('08, 21k miles) was in a very poor condition, as you can see in the first photo it was literally falling off in large chunks. To improve access I removed the exhaust pipes and put the bike on a workshop stand. Underneath the flaky paint was a chalky deposit that needed rubbing down to metal prior to painting. I found a circular wire brush on a Dremel useful for this, I got through 3 of these brushes doing this job alone - they seem to spontaneously disintegrate after 5 minutes of use! After masking off all the bits not to be painted I put on 3 coats of acid-etch primer then 3 of satin finish PJ1 black engine paint. While off the bike the exhaust pipe got a polish so I think you will agree it all looks a lot better now.
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thanks for your comments, I polished the pipes using a kit I bought on Amazon, which consists of a sisal mop you put on an electric drill, along with some supplied polishing compound, work it on the pipe, then finished off with metal polish like Autosol
something like this ....
http://www.amazon.co.uk/PRO-MAX-15pc-Al ... ishing+kit
Also regarding preparation for painting, I detached the oil pipe that runs to the oil cooler, and prior to that drained the oil
something like this ....
http://www.amazon.co.uk/PRO-MAX-15pc-Al ... ishing+kit
Also regarding preparation for painting, I detached the oil pipe that runs to the oil cooler, and prior to that drained the oil
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- beachcomber
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very nice job - looks the biz.
As we have several covers to refurb, I've taken the easy way out and had them blasted back to raw alloy ].
Then they'll be coated in a special textured paint [ Black / Red ] we use on the Jag C Type replicas - mainly the dashboards / valve covers.
Not nearly so satisfying as a DIY job, but the results are totally first class - not to mention hassle free !
Imagine the valve / cam covers of a Porsche Ferrari - that's the kind of finish.
I'm also going to try out the same process [ soda blast first ] on an engine / powertrain unit [ satin Black ] to see what it looks like.
As we have several covers to refurb, I've taken the easy way out and had them blasted back to raw alloy ].
Then they'll be coated in a special textured paint [ Black / Red ] we use on the Jag C Type replicas - mainly the dashboards / valve covers.
Not nearly so satisfying as a DIY job, but the results are totally first class - not to mention hassle free !
Imagine the valve / cam covers of a Porsche Ferrari - that's the kind of finish.
I'm also going to try out the same process [ soda blast first ] on an engine / powertrain unit [ satin Black ] to see what it looks like.
"if at first you don't succeed - you've already been a failure once"
Best start - is a fender extender...........
But - anyone know if the protection plates made by Cymarc - fits?
It should do. Okay it looks a bit agricultural for the 1200s, but in black - wouldn't be so noticible
http://www.cymarcbikeparts.co.uk/bmw-r1 ... r-87-p.asp
Even if you only fitted it for the winter months?
If you ask him - he'd leave the R1200GS stencil out.
Al
But - anyone know if the protection plates made by Cymarc - fits?
It should do. Okay it looks a bit agricultural for the 1200s, but in black - wouldn't be so noticible
http://www.cymarcbikeparts.co.uk/bmw-r1 ... r-87-p.asp
Even if you only fitted it for the winter months?
If you ask him - he'd leave the R1200GS stencil out.
Al
If I am ever on life support - Unplug me......
Then plug me back in..........
See if that works .....
Then plug me back in..........
See if that works .....
- The Teutonic Tangerine
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My R1200 ST has an optional Sump guard and the plate in front of the engine - It keeps teh whole engine remarkably clean
There would appear to be a surfeit of prolixity and sesquipedalian content today please do not use a big word when a singularly un-loquacious and diminutive linguistic expression will satisfactorily accomplish the contemporary necessity
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