Having my bike powdered Peeka Blue. I have a monster compressor just no oven. I would like to sandblast it myself could you do a video of the sandblasting process.
So to be honest I don't have a sandblasting cabinet large enough for a motorcycle frame but I can explain to you what I had to do last time I blasted a frame. So basically last time I did it I pulled the gun and the pickup out of the blasting cabinet and I filled a 5 gallon bucket full of the media. Then I pulled a removable bed liner out of a truck to do the blasting in to catch all of the media (you can use other things like a tarp or whatever but I had the bed liner at my disposal). Then you suit up in a heavy coat, long pants, and some kind of helmet or face shield so you don't blast your bare skin. Then go to town blasting the frame. To be honest its pretty miserable lol. Its more of a summer time thing that you do outside of the shop so you don't make a mess. And being bundled up in the heat of the summer isn't a lot of fun. Not to mention getting the media all in your clothes and you'll always find a way to blast your bare skin lol. If you end up going that route be sure to be patient because you'll want a lot of breaks lol.
I started with "Alloy Silver" to get an even base on the whole frame and then the top coat is a translucent blue called "Intense Blue." The powder I use comes from prismatic powders
@@koma7252 I havent had any issues but I also haven't put powder coat in a lot of extreme conditions. I've done some exhausts and they seem to be doing fine
@@whatisupproductions441 So did you partially cure the Alloy Silver before applying the top coat of blue? And was it easy to apply the second coat, the blue, with the Eastwood gun?
Nice looking blue it be nice if had a black glitter over the blue be bad ass looking quad
What oven did u used?
Nice! Where are you located? Looking to freshen up my '07 r6 frame. Nothing crazy just the same color or as close to factory as possible...
I'm up in Norwalk, Ohio
Aw man that's perfect! I'm out in Columbus...
Having my bike powdered Peeka Blue. I have a monster compressor just no oven. I would like to sandblast it myself could you do a video of the sandblasting process.
So to be honest I don't have a sandblasting cabinet large enough for a motorcycle frame but I can explain to you what I had to do last time I blasted a frame. So basically last time I did it I pulled the gun and the pickup out of the blasting cabinet and I filled a 5 gallon bucket full of the media. Then I pulled a removable bed liner out of a truck to do the blasting in to catch all of the media (you can use other things like a tarp or whatever but I had the bed liner at my disposal). Then you suit up in a heavy coat, long pants, and some kind of helmet or face shield so you don't blast your bare skin. Then go to town blasting the frame. To be honest its pretty miserable lol. Its more of a summer time thing that you do outside of the shop so you don't make a mess. And being bundled up in the heat of the summer isn't a lot of fun. Not to mention getting the media all in your clothes and you'll always find a way to blast your bare skin lol. If you end up going that route be sure to be patient because you'll want a lot of breaks lol.
Hey nice job, what did you use colour wise to get that looking so good?
I started with "Alloy Silver" to get an even base on the whole frame and then the top coat is a translucent blue called "Intense Blue." The powder I use comes from prismatic powders
@@koma7252 I havent had any issues but I also haven't put powder coat in a lot of extreme conditions. I've done some exhausts and they seem to be doing fine
@@whatisupproductions441 So did you partially cure the Alloy Silver before applying the top coat of blue? And was it easy to apply the second coat, the blue, with the Eastwood gun?
I want to know process yo remove power coating
Sand blasting usually does a pretty good job