Gentlemen & all others,
Any tips, suggestions, advice, knowledge of factory technique, etc. I'm planning on painting the rear fender of my '47 this summer. What is the best way to paint the hinge area of the fender? I have a lot of work to do on the fender, it's currently apart. I planned on painting it apart & carefully wet sanding the hinge area to fit, then assemble. Is this the best approach? Someone posted a pic of the factory painting the fenders assembled. I can understand this for mass production, but not to get the best job. I want to get it as good as I can, but its a rider first, show bike second. I'm not going to weld it to keep the paint perfect. I'd appreciate your experience.
Bob #3756
Any tips, suggestions, advice, knowledge of factory technique, etc. I'm planning on painting the rear fender of my '47 this summer. What is the best way to paint the hinge area of the fender? I have a lot of work to do on the fender, it's currently apart. I planned on painting it apart & carefully wet sanding the hinge area to fit, then assemble. Is this the best approach? Someone posted a pic of the factory painting the fenders assembled. I can understand this for mass production, but not to get the best job. I want to get it as good as I can, but its a rider first, show bike second. I'm not going to weld it to keep the paint perfect. I'd appreciate your experience.
Bob #3756
as the metal flexs and a paint chip about 1 " long about about 3/8" wide flakes off the fender above the hinge. As you look around at the meets you will see bare rusty metal above the hinge on a lot of machines where this has happened. I have heard much cursing over this by guys who have made this mistake of hinging those lower fenders open on freshly repainted machines, regardless of how well lubricated the hinge is.
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