Old single stage paint, Crack prevention

secondslc

New member
I have an old scooter (1967 Lambretta if any of you want to know) with a single stage repaint. It started cracking in some places. I know i cant fix that, but how do i keep it from spreading? Should i "feed" the paint with some #7? and then seal it in? i have no clue what to do. The scooter is in perfect shape and it sucks that the paint is cracking. Anybody have any suggestions? Ill take pics of it when i can...hopefully soon..
 
~One man’s opinion / observations ~



Although the Lambretta can’t hold a candle to the Vespa GS (just kidding, you can probably guess I was a UK Mod) sounds like the resin (paint) system needs oils



This is the methodology I used on an Aprilla scooter-

Surface Preparation-

1. Wash vehicle with a good quality car wash concentrate 1.0oz per 2 gallon

2. Rinse vehicle thoroughly.

3. Remove any imbedded contaminants with detailing clay (Clay Magicâ„¢) and a lubrication solution 5:1 (Distilled water/Wooliteâ„¢)

4. Remove any surface imperfections with a suitable machine polish (Groit’s Machine Polish #1, 2 or 3)

Or a swirl mark remover (3Mâ„¢'s PI-III Machine Glaze, P/N 05397)

5. Clean paint film surface with a pre-wax cleaner (P21Sâ„¢ Gloss Enhancing Paintwork Cleaner)

6. Lightly wash paint surface with a diluted car wash concentrate 1.0oz per gallon

7. Dry thoroughly and start Klasse (AIO + SG) application process



~Hope this helps~



Experience unshared; is knowledge wasted…/ Jon

justadumbarchitect * so I question everything *
 
secondslc- I have some cracking on the hood of my single-stage XJS, where the constant tension/heat/other factors were just been too much for the paint. You're on the right track. Using products like #7 will "feed" the paint. Yeah, this "feeding" business is bull on modern paints, but it's gospel-truth on old single-stage. My Jag's paint has been cracked for years, but it's hardly gotten *any* worse since I started really taking care of it as best I can. As the man said- "Find something you like and use it often". The trick is in that "use it often" part; don't let it go too long between treatments.
 
Back
Top