I had some fabric touch the exhaust while it was hot and burned onto the metal. I tried removing it with baking soda and vinegar which quickly turned into scraping it off with a razor. I'm wondering if anyone has any thoughts on how best to remove the residue that remains and the scratches I've made. I should have asked the group beforehand... Thanks for any advice! "As a boy I had monsters under my bed and now as an adult they live in the garage. Just can't get away from them." - Numbercruncher
At this point I'd be sending that section off to be powder coated black I'm afraid. Maybe someone else has another suggestion but now that it's scratched... [emoji107] Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Or I'll just wait until I get the Termis. Someone recommended Red Scottish Brite on one of the other boards. Going to give that a shot and cross my fingers until I upgrade... "As a boy I had monsters under my bed and now as an adult they live in the garage. Just can't get away from them." - Numbercruncher
Scotchbrite will only remove material, so you might get the scratches out but at the expense of being left with a silver patch. Camcoat, I think, charge about 40 quid for an exhaust section, so if this part is detachable and quite small, I would guess at half that to coat it gold. Carriage should be cheap too.
They recommended scrubbing the whole part so it will wear evenly when it gets hot. "As a boy I had monsters under my bed and now as an adult they live in the garage. Just can't get away from them." - Numbercruncher
I think the suggestion is to rub it back to bare metal, then let the heat turn it gold again. Problem is it won't stay gold, it will discolour till it goes nasty brown and that's if it's actually stainless...
Just tell the wife/girlfriend/holder of the purse strings that it will have to be a termi then :wink:
I recently polished up the headers on my 1200S - they had become discoloured due to be parked outside overnight during the summer and then starting the bike first thing in the morning with condensation on them. I started off using scotchbrite and some GT85 for lubrication, as well as Autosol and a rag. They came up absolutely beautifully. I'd recommend trying the same thing - maybe try it in a less visible area first.
Pics? "As a boy I had monsters under my bed and now as an adult they live in the garage. Just can't get away from them." - Numbercruncher
No pics - they were initially silver and quite bright in appearance, but have since dulled back down the usual bronzey-brown.