plasti-dip
#1
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juneeaa memba!


Joined: Oct 2003
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From: boogled up in...Idaho!
Bikes: Crap. The box is not big enough...
plasti-dip
Anyone have any experience? I'm planning to paint a (decidedly) off-topic frame with the flat black plasti-dip and am looking for anyone's experience. Additionally I'd like to cut some stencils for the manufacturer's name and logo, for the downtube and headtube.
Any advice?
Any advice?
#2
Senior Member



Joined: Dec 2005
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I've used it on fender brackets to eliminate rattles, but I hadn't considered an entire frame! It's really thick stuff, so getting it applied evenly will be your biggest problem. And then the frame will look like it's covered in plastic. Hmm.
Neal
Neal
#5
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juneeaa memba!


Joined: Oct 2003
Posts: 5,631
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From: boogled up in...Idaho!
Bikes: Crap. The box is not big enough...
I got the spray can. I'm sure that it'll still be thick...but I'm shooting it onto plastic, so it is somehow appropriate. I think I am gonna find something to experiment on tomorrow. Maybe the schnauzer...
How would I get stencils to work?
How would I get stencils to work?
#6
I used the black spray kind on a bmx fork once to see how it would turn out and it remained kind of sticky even after it dried. After a couple of days it looked really bad since all of the dust stuck to it. I would not recommend it.
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Last edited by purebikes; 04-05-10 at 05:22 AM.
#10
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If it was a simple bike, a fixed gear, no brakes or front brake only, maybe Line-X or Rhinolining as used on trucks would work? That stuff is the devil to remove, but it is also catalized.
Maybe good theft protection too, or you would start a trend...
#11
surly old man

Joined: Sep 2006
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From: Carlisle, PA
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Seems like powdercoating might be what you are looking for. Means paying money and having someone else do it. But it works well.
jim
jim
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Cross Check Nexus7, IRO Mark V, Trek 620 Nexus7, Karate Monkey half fat, IRO Model 19 fixed, Amp Research B3, Surly 1x1 half fat fixed, and more...
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#12
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juneeaa memba!


Joined: Oct 2003
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From: boogled up in...Idaho!
Bikes: Crap. The box is not big enough...
well, I am sure that powdercoating and rust aren't issues here - its going on a CF frame (I said it was off topic. But you guys, of all of the forums, are the resourceful ones...). I tried the stuff on an old aluminum fork today. It isn't cured all the way yet, and still feels, um, kinda sticky, but it is bonding like the devil to my soul after 6 hours. I can't get my thumbnail through it. I abraded the fork with 100grit sandpaper before I shot it, to see if it covers scratches...it doesn't. It doesn't go on perfectly smoothly, either. There's a faint bumpy texture to it. I'm gonna work it over after it cures all the way.
My inspiration for all this is IBIS. I have a Mojo Carbon that has a really sweet rubberized paint surface; it takes branches and rock hits in stride, isn't slippery when wet, and looks pretty cool, too.
I'd love to have such a useful surface on everyday bikes.
My inspiration for all this is IBIS. I have a Mojo Carbon that has a really sweet rubberized paint surface; it takes branches and rock hits in stride, isn't slippery when wet, and looks pretty cool, too.
I'd love to have such a useful surface on everyday bikes.
#13
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Joined: Jun 2006
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What Ibis used was a"soft touch" Urethane paint, also used in the auto and computer industries for a semi resilient low gloss or no gloss coating. Makes hard plastics feel less cheap.
#18
multimodal commuter
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Bikes: 1940s Fothergill, 1959 Allegro Special, 1963? Claud Butler Olympic Sprint, Lambert 'Clubman', 1974 Fuji "the Ace", 1976 Holdsworth 650b conversion rando bike, 1983 Trek 720 tourer, 1984 Counterpoint Opus II, 1993 Basso Gap, 2010 Downtube 8h, and...
#20
Thread Starter
juneeaa memba!


Joined: Oct 2003
Posts: 5,631
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From: boogled up in...Idaho!
Bikes: Crap. The box is not big enough...
repechage wins again! The soft touch stuff is the way to go. I spent a while wading around on the web and got to this. Expensive, but probably pretty cool...a person may just be able to shoot the soft touch top coat and have a pretty unique application. I'm thinking striping graphics in candy right over the plastic, though, and then some stickers and a soft touch top coat. Two cans would be about $80, and I already have the water slide decal material somewhere around here...









