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Posted

I own a few older quads mix of kinds a couple of  Yamahas, a Honda, can-am  a Kawasaki, they are older quads but in good shape the question of the day is....... what's the best way to polish up the plastic?

 I have found that Dollar General mold remover is good to get the black stuff off the plastic works good, but was wondering how you polish up the plastics on yours.

  • 2 weeks later...
Posted

I have two 1988 Yamaha Terra Pro's, and found if you wet sand the Plastic with 220 grit sandpaper, then blow it dry with a compressor.  Use Denatured Alcohol  to remove any oil from your skin, then it is ready for a Bonding primer, which is sold by Sherman Williams.

it's in a Brown label can and around $12. , it sprays on white.  I then dry sanded with 320 to smooth out the Primer, and then again use Denatured Alcohol.  You are now ready to paint any color you like, as long as you use Fusion, or any that says bonds to plastic.

I have found that this Bonding Primer is the best and will not peal as others do.  Good Luck.

  • 2 weeks later...
Posted

If the plastics are really bad sanding with primer and paint is the only option as Catman said. I paint plastics as a last resort. If its heavily oxidized i scrape all the oxidation off lightly with a razor blade at 90 degree angle to the plastic, I say lightly you don't want to gouge the plastic. Then I go over it with 000 steel wool, next wet sand with 220 until you get a uniform smooth finish. Continue wet sanding with finer grit as you go 400, 600, 800, 1000 , 1500 I usually don't go higher than that. Then use a good plastic polish. Its not as good as new but its a good 5 footer.

  • 5 months later...
Posted
On 8/7/2022 at 1:13 PM, catman977 said:

I have two 1988 Yamaha Terra Pro's, and found if you wet sand the Plastic with 220 grit sandpaper, then blow it dry with a compressor.  Use Denatured Alcohol  to remove any oil from your skin, then it is ready for a Bonding primer, which is sold by Sherman Williams.

it's in a Brown label can and around $12. , it sprays on white.  I then dry sanded with 320 to smooth out the Primer, and then again use Denatured Alcohol.  You are now ready to paint any color you like, as long as you use Fusion, or any that says bonds to plastic.

I have found that this Bonding Primer is the best and will not peal as others do.  Good Luck.

Just curious, if the color coat is bonding to the primer why use the fusion? And how does the paint hold up over time? I've not seen anybody say how their paint jobs looked after a year.

Posted

From what I get, you are using fusion, a krypton paint for plastic, over the sherwin Williams bonding primer. The question is why use bonding primer if fusion is for plastic.

  • Like 1
Posted

I got one in my shop right now that has rhino lined grill on it. I've seen a whole quad done before and it holds up really good and looks badass.  you can even use the roll on stuff. and now it comes in all kinds of crazy colors

  • Like 1
Posted (edited)
5 hours ago, rgeiser said:

I got one in my shop right now that has rhino lined grill on it. I've seen a whole quad done before and it holds up really good and looks badass.  you can even use the roll on stuff. and now it comes in all kinds of crazy colors

Would you ask the owner what product was used please? Dunh I reread your post and answered my own Question. Rhino liner is some serious stuff.

Edited by Jim Denton
Posted

The plastic on one of my ATVs was scratched and unsightly. I lightly sanded it and then refinished it with a colored spray-on bed liner material. It looks great and is very durable, especially when riding off-road 

Posted
54 minutes ago, 406offroad said:

The plastic on one of my ATVs was scratched and unsightly. I lightly sanded it and then refinished it with a colored spray-on bed liner material. It looks great and is very durable, especially when riding off-road 

What brand? I'm leaning towards POR15. Not worried about pretty, so much as uniform. 

  • 2 weeks later...
Posted
On 8/19/2022 at 1:25 PM, Gwbarm said:

If the plastics are really bad sanding with primer and paint is the only option as Catman said. I paint plastics as a last resort. If its heavily oxidized i scrape all the oxidation off lightly with a razor blade at 90 degree angle to the plastic, I say lightly you don't want to gouge the plastic. Then I go over it with 000 steel wool, next wet sand with 220 until you get a uniform smooth finish. Continue wet sanding with finer grit as you go 400, 600, 800, 1000 , 1500 I usually don't go higher than that. Then use a good plastic polish. Its not as good as new but its a good 5 footer.

5 footer lol, is that like 20/20 vision? Looks good from 20' away as long you don't stare at it for more than 20 seconds 

  • 2 months later...
  • 2 months later...
Posted

I tried doing that it didnt work out so good for me. I think i probably didnt get even heat on the big area and it was not uniform, kind of splotchy. I have been trying to figure out how to get a large even heat  area hot enough, bigger than a torch or heat gun.

Posted

Watched a video the other day on polishing plastic he used an aluminum polishing stick with high speed buffing wheel on a grinder that could be set at 3000 rpm. Haven't tried it myself but he fixed all the plastic on an old quad to like new condition and didn't take long even did a windshield to a side x side. 

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