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Making up a cleaning kit - Printable Version +- Fazer Owners Club - Unofficial (https://foc-u.co.uk/mybb) +-- Forum: General (https://foc-u.co.uk/mybb/forumdisplay.php?fid=65) +--- Forum: General (https://foc-u.co.uk/mybb/forumdisplay.php?fid=69) +--- Thread: Making up a cleaning kit (/showthread.php?tid=82451) |
Making up a cleaning kit - Dudeofrude - 03-06-21 So having a faired bike again has reminded me how much of a pain in the ass they are to clean, and the fact its black in places is even worse. So I'm looking at putting together a really good cleaning kit. The best washes, polishes, waxes as well as brushes chamois etc etc So I thought I'd ask you guys what you use, given that (without sounding rude) a lot of you guys are on the more mature side of things I trust that most of you have been using some of the same products for years so you would have good recommendations ? I mean I could just go out and spend my life savings on autoglym but I'd hazard a guess and say a £5 bottle of turtle wax is probably just as good as a £27 bottle of that ?♂️ So anyway partly because I could really use the advice and partly because it would be nice to have an actual topic that relates to biking on here ? would anyone be so kind as to offer up suggestions on good cleaning products Thanks ?? Re: Making up a cleaning kit - fazersharp - 03-06-21 Parifin for the dirty bits just enough to damp a rag. Then polish with autoglym for the metal and shiny plastics and then armerall plastic and trim stuff for the matt plastics like rear guard and back of indicators/and infill's. Only use water on the flies in the fairing. Don't use any fancy cloths but any old clothes from Sharp Hall that are on the way to the charity have to go through me first. White and black t shirts dont usually get to see the charity shop - neither does any soft thick fluffy socks (not mine )- good for buffing. Re: Making up a cleaning kit - b1k3rdude - 03-06-21 Diluted harpic for cleaning exhaust headers, but only only cold pipes and don't use more than once per cleaning session. Re: Making up a cleaning kit - Dave48 - 03-06-21 Any old towels-bath,hand,tea also cotton sheets torn up into manageable size pieces. Cheap maxi size kitchen rolls, Old toothbrushes etc. I use cheap car wash eg 5L size Carplan off ebay. Sponges comefromPoundland, Scourerpads from Aldi. Decent chamois leather from Window cleaning supplies off eBay.(Not Halfords-far too dear). GT 85 spray on offer in Aldi orWilko. Autoglym polish from bestpricedeal online. Once bike really deep cleaned then protect all surfaces with polish/spray whatever. The GT85 is good on electrics and metal also plastic panels where studs and o rings are used to join together. The really dear products like ACF50 are worth the cost for all season protection. I find bike cleaning very therapeutic but have a bit of OCD in this area! Re: Making up a cleaning kit - Dave48 - 03-06-21 PS 4L Paraffin from B&Q, Motul factory line chain lube. WURTH chain cleaning brush. Re: Making up a cleaning kit - Dudeofrude - 04-06-21 Some good info there guys cheers. So autoglym is the best wax/polish?? Any particular one as there seems to be about 15 variants to pick from ? And are the ebay chamois any good? They seem to be super cheap compared to the shops Re: Making up a cleaning kit - agricola - 04-06-21 Kitchen utensil type brushes for getting crap off in the nooks and crannies. Theres all shapes, sizes, and bristle hardness available at places like Dunelm. Ive a variety, including the bottle brush type. Parrafin for crud removal, wash off, then wash with washing up liquid, wash off with hose (not pressure washer). Blow dry everywhere with comp air, when dry spray everywhere but the braking bits etc with ACF50. Relube the chain. Re: Making up a cleaning kit - fazersharp - 04-06-21 (04-06-21, 05:06 PM)Dudeofrude link Wrote: Some good info there guys cheers.I use the super resin polish one. I dont bother with ACF 50 in the summer as it just makes the summer dust stick to it and as I wont be getting wet anyway. I do use it in the winter. Re: Making up a cleaning kit - Grahamm - 04-06-21 A long handled paint brush (of the type for getting behind radiators) is good for getting to bits that you can't reach any other way :thumbup Re: Making up a cleaning kit - Dave48 - 04-06-21 Dudeofrude-the ebay window cleaning products seller is called Wintecs-Cornwall based if memory serves me right?. Their chamois leather was about£7 for a generous size cloth of good quality. Re: Making up a cleaning kit - Dudeofrude - 23-06-21 Can anyone advise me how to get T-cut off of textured plastic? I was doing the tank and accidently caught the panel underneath and now I can't get it off ? I've tried rewashing it, scubbing it, alcohol etc but nothing is shifting it ? Re: Making up a cleaning kit - vinnyb - 23-06-21 (23-06-21, 12:34 PM)Dudeofrude link Wrote: Can anyone advise me how to get T-cut off of textured plastic? I was doing the tank and accidently caught the panel underneath and now I can't get it off ? I've tried rewashing it, scubbing it, alcohol etc but nothing is shifting it ?WD40 or GT85 might be worth a try, it certainly won't do it any harm. Re: Making up a cleaning kit - b1k3rdude - 23-06-21 (23-06-21, 12:34 PM)Dudeofrude link Wrote: Can anyone advise me how to get T-cut off of textured plastic?Well if it def wont clean off (have you tried isopropyl and cotton buds?), then you could use bumper restorer - - https://www.amazon.co.uk/Forever-Products-Black-Improved-Formula/dp/B00FAYLPZK Re: Making up a cleaning kit - Dudeofrude - 23-06-21 I've tried alcohol wipes, wd40 and muc off with no joy ? can't believe something so silly is cause such a bit issue ? Re: Making up a cleaning kit - Trebus - 24-06-21 I had the same issue before. Couldn’t find anything to shift it other than Autoglym bumper care. Re: Making up a cleaning kit - Gnasher - 24-06-21 (23-06-21, 12:34 PM)Dudeofrude link Wrote: Can anyone advise me how to get T-cut off of textured plastic? I was doing the tank and accidently caught the panel underneath and now I can't get it off ? I've tried rewashing it, scubbing it, alcohol etc but nothing is shifting it ? A pencil rubber (remember them) and then wipe it with a cloth, it's always worked for me. ![]() Re: Making up a cleaning kit - Dudeofrude - 25-06-21 (24-06-21, 07:31 AM)Gnasher link Wrote: [quote author=Dudeofrude link=topic=26954.msg326235#msg326235 date=1624448071] A pencil rubber (remember them) and then wipe it with a cloth, it's always worked for me. ![]() [/quote] Gnasher you foccing legend!! ?? It's not quite as clean as it was before the incident but it's definitely 100x better. Once I've given it all another proper wash then I reckon the issue will be resolved. Thanks again ?? Re: Making up a cleaning kit - b1k3rdude - 25-06-21 (25-06-21, 04:46 PM)Dudeofrude link Wrote: Gnasher you foccing legend!!LOL, indeed! Re: Making up a cleaning kit - robbo - 25-06-21 Was watching a Wheeler Dealers last night, where Ant Antstead had a rubber rotary disc gadget to use in a drill, specifically for cleaning glue residue from bodywork. Another "fix it" for the future. Thanks Gnasher for the headsup. Re: Making up a cleaning kit - Gnasher - 26-06-21 (25-06-21, 04:46 PM)Dudeofrude link Wrote: Gnasher you foccing legend!! ?? You're welcome bud. The rubber hardness/composition has a big impact on the results it's a bit pot luck until you find what rubber works best, with whatever you've put on the trim surface. The fact you've used other products especially alcohol it will have set the stuff and attacked the ABS plastic surface, hence the lighter surface were you've treated it. Try Autoglym bumper gel, Armour All or back to black stuff and it will come back as good as new. Again you get different results, it's a matter of finding out what works best with your trim. ![]() |