I'm painting a set of 1941 fenders this week. As Chris stated the fenders were painted by the "Factory" all together with the nuts, bolts, lockwashers all in place. To start with, I un-rivet the fender from the braces for several reasons. First I straighten the baces and relieve any and all stress from them. After being on a bike for 60+ years they get pushed around alot and put stress on the fender causing metal fatigue, cracks in the metal and that warped side skirt of the fender look. When the braces are straight they should lie inside of the fender without any pounding and should touch all of the mating surfaces evenly. Next, I metal finish the fender itself. The side skirts should be straight when viewed from the front and not look like they will take off if you go fast. If the hinge is not perfect take it off. Now is the time to fix it and make it perfect. If you don't it will be a pain in the butt as long as you own the bike. When the fenders are done I carefully bolt the braces on and tighten them up. Then I bolt them to the bike and fully tighten everything up and check for fit, (make sure you use EVERY bolt that holds the rear fender on). If they don't fit correctly I un-rivet the braces and get the fender straight on the bike, clamp the braces together and replace the rivets. This is very time consuming and on my '41 I put the rear fender on the bike and took it off 12 times before it was perfect. When everything fits it's time to rivet the fender to the braces. I have some friends that repair airplanes and I have them do the riveting.
It's time consuming but well worth the effort.
It's time consuming but well worth the effort.
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