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pros and cons of painting engines
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Absorbing heat isn't in play here, engines get them selves hot. Is the increase in dissipation due to being black more than the increase in insulation from the added paint? I think it just doesn't matter. Paint it if you like the look. I like it, I paint some of them, they don't get any hotter than the others as far as I can tell. Too hot? Not gonna happen.
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Griffyn
Originally posted by FLHGSRay View PostThe black/absorbing thing is fact, except it doesn't work that way here. Why? Because heat ALWAYS travels from hot to cold. And since the temperature of the engine is higher than the heat from the Sun, the black paint will actually move heat from the engine to atmosphere. Really.
And all of my physicist friends tell me that the science backs me up on that.
As for the original topic, my advice is to prep, prep, prep. If your engine looks dirty and oxidized and it's just too much work to polish it up, then it's not clean enough for paint and you should just run the bike dirty until it dies under you. Paint is easier to keep clean over time, but you need the engine a lot cleaner to paint it than you do to polish it. Unless you've already had the motor blasted and steamed and all that jazz, in which case 'Good show. Do as thou wilt upon thy own lands.'
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Originally posted by Griffyn View PostIf your engine looks dirty and oxidized and it's just too much work to polish it up, then it's not clean enough for paint and you should just run the bike dirty until it dies under you.
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Old guy
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Griffyn
Originally posted by tkent02 View PostHeres a bit of news. Dirt on an engine won't make it die. Ever.
I just said that if it's too much trouble to polish, run it dirty until it wears out.
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Me old too. Touch up the headers frequently - spray it on cardboard, then apply it with a brush.1982 GS1100E V&H "SS" exhaust, APE pods, 1150 oil cooler, 140 speedo, 99.3 rear wheel HP, black engine, '83 red
2016 XL883L sigpic Two-tone blue and white. Almost 42 hp! Status: destroyed, now owned by the insurance company. The hole in my memory starts an hour before the accident and ends 24 hours after.
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Griffyn
Originally posted by tkent02 View PostMy bikes don't die, I maintain them.
Seriously, are you going to try and add to the conversation or just challenge for the world's worst semantic trolling job ever?
So yeah, paint or not to paint is an individual preference. Done right it neither helps nor hurts the cooling by more than sub-functional degrees. Do it wrong and you will uncover a world of aesthetic problems, mostly in chipping, peeling, flaking and looking like crap. Your bike, have fun with it.
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Even with the best prep
Anything you paint has to be repainted, someday. Ask anyone with a house, a boat a car and yes, even a motorcycle. Ask SuzuKi. They put a good varnish on the engine originally and what happened?-right.
So the first time you do it it'll look great for as long as it takes for the first stone to chip it, the first edge to lift a bit and let some water in...so it goes. But good prep helps a lot (7 years sounds darn good to me! http://www.thegsresources.com/_forum...10&postcount=3)
But bare metal needs maintenance too. There's no rest for a perfectionist.
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Originally posted by Griffyn View PostWasn't talking to you when I said it then, was I?
Seriously, are you going to try and add to the conversation or just challenge for the world's worst semantic trolling job ever?
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I just ordered some glossy black engine paint - good to 550 f, my exhaust is flat black good to 2000 f. The engine paint's half the price of the exhaust.1982 GS1100E V&H "SS" exhaust, APE pods, 1150 oil cooler, 140 speedo, 99.3 rear wheel HP, black engine, '83 red
2016 XL883L sigpic Two-tone blue and white. Almost 42 hp! Status: destroyed, now owned by the insurance company. The hole in my memory starts an hour before the accident and ends 24 hours after.
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GSX1000E
I use VHT Hi-Temp Caliper paint of my engines. It is rated to 900 degrees Fahrenheit and costs no more than the inferior Hi-Temp Engine paint that is only rated to 500 or 550 degrees. The choice is yours as to which one to use.
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