In the process of restoration of several bikes that have have gone through the AMCA (and a couple that may) and in talking with several restorers, I note that many of the motorcycles being restored are over-restored. Though the AMCA has as part of its creed the preservation of antique motorcycles, there are a vast number of bikes out there that look much better than anything the manufacturer produced. Super-slick paint jobs, clear-coated decals, , glossy powdercoated frames and other parts, stainless spokes and other modern touches in the process of restoration certainly produce some beautiful machines. However, over time these bikes will never develop quite the patina of the factory finishes or the earlier restorations that were more era-correct.
I saw this restoration "dilemna" in the Corvette restoration field a number of years back. Many Vette's had notorious paint from the factory with noticeable orange peel, but most restored ones had mirror-like paint. There were other examples I could mention, but the point is that like a pendulum, the trend swung back to a more "life-like" restoration process after the National Corvette Restorers Society and such venues as Bloomington Gold started deducting points from over-restored vehicles, even penalizing for paint with out some degree of orange peel. The result was restorations more true to the original appearance.
Taking the over-restoration trend one step further, with the improved powderpainting procedures out there now, it is even possible to powdercoat the sheetmetal, especially if your color choice is black!
As noted in another thread that Harley Creation began on the topic of original vs. restored machines with comments about "rustorations", I am curious what others think about this topic. And, should the AMCA begin to stress a more "era-correct" appearance to Original Restored motorcycles to include disallowing powdercoating, stainless, etc?
FYI, I would state that beyond a doubt my bikes are over-restored. Thanks.
I saw this restoration "dilemna" in the Corvette restoration field a number of years back. Many Vette's had notorious paint from the factory with noticeable orange peel, but most restored ones had mirror-like paint. There were other examples I could mention, but the point is that like a pendulum, the trend swung back to a more "life-like" restoration process after the National Corvette Restorers Society and such venues as Bloomington Gold started deducting points from over-restored vehicles, even penalizing for paint with out some degree of orange peel. The result was restorations more true to the original appearance.
Taking the over-restoration trend one step further, with the improved powderpainting procedures out there now, it is even possible to powdercoat the sheetmetal, especially if your color choice is black!
As noted in another thread that Harley Creation began on the topic of original vs. restored machines with comments about "rustorations", I am curious what others think about this topic. And, should the AMCA begin to stress a more "era-correct" appearance to Original Restored motorcycles to include disallowing powdercoating, stainless, etc?
FYI, I would state that beyond a doubt my bikes are over-restored. Thanks.
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