Hi all
Winters coming, so what are some good methods of preparing my bike in order to help prevent rust and corrosion?
I will start this off;
*Keeping chain clean and lubed
*Installing a fender extender and rear hugger?
*Correct type, amount and dilution of antifreeze.
Hose the salt and crap off before putting away,
Cover in wd40 or such like,
See on here for a session to acf50 it for you,
leave in garage and take car / train / bus.
Or my method, carry on as usual, wash it when I can, sort it all in spring.
(21-10-12, 04:43 PM)ghostbiker link Wrote: Acf 50 treatment
when i bought my bike ,the engine had been treated with acf 50 ,but after riding it for 5 mins the smell put me off using the acf 50
does anyone else find this ?
Thanks for the tips guys. Keep em coming.
I have a X reg FZS600. Only had it for about 4 months. My first big bike. It has the standard exhaust manifold which Ive heard will rot pretty rapidly so next time the weathers good I plan to take it off and give it afew coats of fire grate paint. I use the bike to commute about 30 miles per day and short of heavy snow nothing will stop me using it for this. I save around £7 per day not having to buy a parking ticket and of course get better mpg than my car also.
The bolt heads through the brake discs are starting to rust. Can i grease these to prevent further corrosion?
when i bought my bike ,the engine had been treated with acf 50 ,but after riding it for 5 mins the smell put me off using the acf 50
does anyone else find this ?
[/quote]
Have heard other stories of this and big clouds of smoke etc. However, I had nothing of the sort when I recently sprayed down mine. Dunno if its down to how soon afterwards you get on the thing or not. I did mine on a Saturday, then didn't take it out until the Monday. YMMV.
Another tip I was told, was give the bike a regular clean, to wash off crud and salt, but importantly, use cold water. Apparently hot water can increase the rust process. And don't use a pressure washer, it just forces water into places where it won't dry.
On a wet day like today after washing the bike theres no possibility all the moisture will dry off but I have a leaf blower which is fantastic for getting rid of residual moisture from all the nooks & crannies-like a cold hairdrier! :lol A light coating of ACF50 protects everything & keeps the tin-worm at bay but keep well away from tyres & brakes! :eek
(22-10-12, 09:31 AM)DanielT link Wrote: Latest Ride magazine has an article about winter-proofing. Not sure if it's the bike or the rider though. Will post later when I've read it
Covers both. Actually quite a useful read. Also got some handy tips on riding in wet too (e.g. leaning your body rather than the bike when cornering).
It can be put on the downpipes but they get so hot it all burns off pretty darn quickly - when i had my FZS600 i covered the downpipes in ACF50 when i wasn't using the bike for a week or so but otherwise i just replaced them with stainless
WD40 is also good and probably cheaper, same applies avoid brakes and tyres! lol [/size][/color]My R1 has now covered 55,000 miles in all weathers and still looks good, also helps maintenace as avoids nuts/bolts seizing or rusting solid! Also use Scottoiler which is a boon with no centre stand
Age is a question of mind over matter, if you don't mind, it doesn't matter!
If I had a brain I would be dangerous
put mines to bed the other day..
thing got a good wash, polish and wax..
I then sprayed the chain and disks in wd40, the rerst got a full spray of Muc-off's ptfe spray..
Now I know a lot of you will reel in horror at me spraying the brakes but the bikes not gonna be moving tioll the spring and itll get a full clean down with brake cleaner etc before its back on the road..
(21-10-12, 10:35 PM)Blisteredfingerz link Wrote:Thanks for the tips guys. Keep em coming.
I have a X reg FZS600. Only had it for about 4 months. My first big bike. It has the standard exhaust manifold which Ive heard will rot pretty rapidly so next time the weathers good I plan to take it off and give it afew coats of fire grate paint. I use the bike to commute about 30 miles per day and short of heavy snow nothing will stop me using it for this. I save around £7 per day not having to buy a parking ticket and of course get better mpg than my car also.
The bolt heads through the brake discs are starting to rust. Can i grease these to prevent further corrosion?
It would be cheapest in the long run to just get a beater winter bike. Some cheap 2 stroke scooter, or something bigger if you must - but lighter, smaller than 600 cc.
Most things done in a hurry need to be done again - patiently.