- Posts: 213
- Thank you received: 1
before or after for paint job????
- steveo_4192003
- Topic Author
- Offline
- User
- 77kz650b-1
i was wondering if i should sand blast and paint before i send it to APE racing for boring ,or do it after wards?
if i do it after bore job, i may mess it up right!
all advise will help out!
oh yeah, i know sand blasting is not the best as bead blasting, but the custom harley builder i work with says he does it all the time for ALL his harley aluminum and steel parts on his bikes and others as well, and never had any problems, and it looks so good and clean.
i will also use a parts washer afterwards and then industrial degreaser at my shop and then paint it with high temp black paint
oh yeah, he also loves these old kzs to, and said he owned one (kz550) 20+years ago!
1977 kz650b-1, 4-2exhaust systetm, pod filters ,jetted 112 main, 17.5 pilot
Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.
- Pterosaur
- Visitor
Get the parts back, stuff the bores with clean rags, mask the mating surfaces, then cover the mask with duct tape and trim with a razor blade. Make a cardboard/plastic sheet template to cover the head gasket mask, and duct tape that down. The tighter and tougher you make the mask, the less risks you take.
Your boss is likey to be using a larger-grain form of sand, and it may suit his applications, given cylinder-blacking is the usual par for his course, but even larger-grain silicas will shatter on impact with the metal, leaving a microscopic dust residue. *NO* form of silica quartz blasting will ever match the finish of glass beading on aluminum. Period.
Depending on the vintage of the motors he's working on, he's also blasting iron heads/jugs, which is a different animal entirely.
Fot the purporse of painting freshly-beaded/blasted aluminum, I'd stay away from chemical parts washers like Safety Kleen and the like.
The best process is to pull the freshly blasted part from the blaster, pull the masking, blow it off thouroughly with a moisture-filtered air source, re-mask, blow again, and start slinging your high-temp paint immediately. Exposing raw aluminum metal to air begins the oxidation process. You've realistically got a couple of hours to putz around, but I'd get after it ASAP.
If you've got to wash the parts prior to painting, do it with a fast reducer - dries quick and leaves practically no residues.
Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.
- steveo_4192003
- Topic Author
- Offline
- User
- 77kz650b-1
- Posts: 213
- Thank you received: 1
the chemical washer in my shop is used for cleaning zinc parts and bronze and copper and steel! all for electric motor parts
im not to sure what they use as a cleaner, but i know its nothing you will find on any shelf at auto parts store.(industrial chemicals )
so i should NOT use a chem.. bath to clean and degrease it before i paint it? i was told blasting wont get all oil/grease off and paint may not hold right.
ill just give it a good air blowing and make sure its nice and clean then paint it a.s.a.p when done blasting it.
heres a pic of his bike w/jocky shit
1977 kz650b-1, 4-2exhaust systetm, pod filters ,jetted 112 main, 17.5 pilot
Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.
- steveo_4192003
- Topic Author
- Offline
- User
- 77kz650b-1
- Posts: 213
- Thank you received: 1
1977 kz650b-1, 4-2exhaust systetm, pod filters ,jetted 112 main, 17.5 pilot
Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.
- Pterosaur
- Visitor
...so i should NOT use a chem.. bath to clean and degrease it before i paint it? i was told blasting wont get all oil/grease off and paint may not hold right.
Any well done bead blasting job worthy of the name will.
An off-the-shelf otion for de-greasing aluminum is good 'ole brake cleaner. $3 a can. Works wonders.
If it's a concern, spray the bejeesus out of your parts with the brake cleaner, wire brush the gunk off and re-spray to rinse. Repeat as necessary/desired. Let dry and blast.
ill just give it a good air blowing and make sure its nice and clean then paint it a.s.a.p when done blasting it.
Yep. That'll do it.
Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.
- Fossil
- Offline
- User
- Posts: 542
- Thank you received: 5
Mask off areas you don't want painted and use a good quality spray can engine paint. I've had good luck with Duplicolors engine enamels.
Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.
- austin3119
- Offline
- User
- Posts: 488
- Thank you received: 7
Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.
- edspring1
- Offline
- User
- Posts: 61
- Thank you received: 3
i have been a painter for some 35 yrs. off and on.
NO RAGS and use on paint related materials for painting. ONLY !
I have seen more than just a couple of times motors blown up and the cause was the guy wiped and cleaned the internals with those shop rags. You know the orange and blue ones. They left so much lint that it all gathered in the oil pump screen and restricted oil flow to the point of starvation. I assume you are talking about EXTRNAL PARTS? Samething. Ever paint something and see all the little hair looking things in it? LINT! From the rag you just wiped it off with.
Use the proper paint related materials and AIR!
Try your best not to even touch anything with your bare fingers. your body leaves oil. And remember if you are painting ALUMINUM, there is a aluminum primer, that is obvioulsy different than regular primers.
SAND BLAST?..OH NO !!!!
Sand actually removes soft metal. Think not? Hold a sand blast nozzle on some aluminum for a few seconds and you can see that the actual metal is being pushed in the direction of the blast. VERY easy to distort aluminum with sand balsting.
GLASS BEAD....is exactly as it sounds. Little round beads of glass. They break up as they hit and do not cause any deformation.
The Harey friend you have? Well I have onwed Harleys for 30 yrs. so I mean no offense. BUT....save the sand blasting for items like steel and iron.
Anyone hear of SODA BLASTING?
Getting a hood and door done in a few eeks useing this method. I will let everyone know how it works out when done. They actually blast baking soda. Of course different size particles for different jobs.
Just my pathetic thoughts
Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.
- Patton
- Offline
- KZr Legend
- Posts: 18640
- Thank you received: 2098
1973 Z1
KZ900 LTD
Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.
- wireman
- Visitor
Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.
- Fossil
- Offline
- User
- Posts: 542
- Thank you received: 5
hoping NOT to be offensive here.
i have been a painter for some 35 yrs. off and on.
NO RAGS and use on paint related materials for painting. ONLY !
I have seen more than just a couple of times motors blown up and the cause was the guy wiped and cleaned the internals with those shop rags. You know the orange and blue ones. They left so much lint that it all gathered in the oil pump screen and restricted oil flow to the point of starvation. I assume you are talking about EXTRNAL PARTS? Samething. Ever paint something and see all the little hair looking things in it? LINT! From the rag you just wiped it off with.
Use the proper paint related materials and AIR!
Try your best not to even touch anything with your bare fingers. your body leaves oil. And remember if you are painting ALUMINUM, there is a aluminum primer, that is obvioulsy different than regular primers.
SAND BLAST?..OH NO !!!!
Sand actually removes soft metal. Think not? Hold a sand blast nozzle on some aluminum for a few seconds and you can see that the actual metal is being pushed in the direction of the blast. VERY easy to distort aluminum with sand balsting.
GLASS BEAD....is exactly as it sounds. Little round beads of glass. They break up as they hit and do not cause any deformation.
The Harey friend you have? Well I have onwed Harleys for 30 yrs. so I mean no offense. BUT....save the sand blasting for items like steel and iron.
Anyone hear of SODA BLASTING?
Getting a hood and door done in a few eeks useing this method. I will let everyone know how it works out when done. They actually blast baking soda. Of course different size particles for different jobs.
Just my pathetic thoughts
I have to agree with you, don't use shop rags or any other rags that will leave lint. I use old washed t shirts without ripping them or cutting them up. I've done quite a few engines this way and never had a problem. It should go without saying, but all passages must be checked no matter how you clean your parts.
Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.
- steveo_4192003
- Topic Author
- Offline
- User
- 77kz650b-1
- Posts: 213
- Thank you received: 1
we argued for a min... the first time he said sand blast ,not bead blast...
he also said i should degrease (break cleaner)it before blasting.
thanks all, i now know what i need to prep this for painting!!! just need time and money!!!!!!:pinch:
1977 kz650b-1, 4-2exhaust systetm, pod filters ,jetted 112 main, 17.5 pilot
Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.