Stripping spray paint off the plastics.

Discussion specific to the 1989 - 1994 (E Series) KDX200 model sold in the USA
Post Reply
Klxkdxrider
Member
Posts: 11
Joined: 10:54 pm Mar 30 2013
Country:

Stripping spray paint off the plastics.

Post by Klxkdxrider »

First time poster here. Gotta a 1998 KLX 300 bored out to 340 last summer that I had a blast on riding in high country CO. The dude I bought it from threw in a 1993 KDX 200E that's not running. He said he bought as is and tried to fix it but couldn't figure it out. So, I'm tryin to figure it out. I'm going to come back here with lots of questions but I have 2 for u now. Some dumbass painted the the plastics with white spray paint. What is the best way to get that crap off and bring back the beauty of Kawasaki green? Also, it's leaking gear oil badly but I can't tell where it's coming from. Where would the most likely source be?

I had an 84 KDX 200 when I was a kid and these are my first bikes in about 20 years so I'm really undereducated on fixing one up. I appreciate the help!
dfeckel
Platinum Member
Platinum Member
Posts: 644
Joined: 07:46 am Nov 09 2009
Country:

Stripping spray paint off the plastics.

Post by dfeckel »

REgarding the plastics, I would think good old sandpaper and elbow grease will be the best bet. Any chemical strong enough to strip the paint might also damage the plastic underneath. Start coarse to grind the paint away, then work finer to get the plastic smooth again. If you go fine enough with wet sandpaper and then polishing compounds, you can get them looking pretty nice.

A likely candidate for the leaking gear oil is your countershaft seal. Those things can leak a lot, and they can also be a bear to totally seal up again. I like to think of a slightly weepy CS seal as an automatic chain oiler.
David Eckel
sarrant
Member
Posts: 463
Joined: 02:47 pm Aug 10 2012
Country: USA
Location: Sac, Ca

Re: Stripping spray paint off the plastics.

Post by sarrant »

I've had good luck stripping spray paint from plastics by soaking in brake fluid. Lifts the paint off without eating up plastic. Slow, laborious process over a few days though.
User avatar
diymirage
Supporting Member II
Supporting Member II
Posts: 2907
Joined: 05:00 pm Sep 19 2011
Country:
Location: michigan

Re: Stripping spray paint off the plastics.

Post by diymirage »

sarrant wrote:I've had good luck stripping spray paint from plastics by soaking in brake fluid. Lifts the paint off without eating up plastic. Slow, laborious process over a few days though.

believe it or not, that is the approach i use when i screw up the paint on model cars
i have a big old pickle jar full of brake fluid that will easily hold a 1/24 scale car
newbbewb wrote:DIYmirage has it right.


-1996 KDX 200 woods weapon (converted to 99 green body)
-1996 KDX 200 plated street toy (barney edition)
-2003 Yamaha TTR125-L (wifeys bike)
-1997 KDX 220 project bike
User avatar
KDXGarage
KDXRider.net
KDXRider.net
Posts: 14568
Joined: 06:45 am Nov 01 2004
Country: United States of America
Location: AL, USA
Contact:

Stripping spray paint off the plastics.

Post by KDXGarage »

Chemical peel, not mechanical.

Which side is it leaking from, left/right, top/bottom??
Thank you for participating on kdxrider.net. :bravo:
To post pictures from a device: viewtopic.php?f=88&t=24128
Klxkdxrider
Member
Posts: 11
Joined: 10:54 pm Mar 30 2013
Country:

Re: Stripping spray paint off the plastics.

Post by Klxkdxrider »

Thanks for the replies! I'm not completely sure but, I think the Leah is coming from the bottom.
User avatar
bufftester
Platinum Member
Platinum Member
Posts: 3540
Joined: 06:03 pm Oct 31 2012
Country: USA
Location: University Place, WA
Contact:

Re: Stripping spray paint off the plastics.

Post by bufftester »

From the bottom around the drain bolt? A lot of folks don't replace the copper crush washer when the do an oil change and after a few times a leak can develop there. Only other places likely if its on the bottom would be the case seam. Easy way I check for leaks is clean the are you want to inspect and dry completely then I dust it with talcum powder or flour (whatever you have on hand). The leak locations show up really easy then.
Post Reply