How should I paint an engine shroud?

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Hi guys, recently bought and installed a robin-subaru staton kit, and so far am loving it. However, the yellow shroud doesn't match the bike at all. How should I go about painting it? I was figuring degrease, light sand, primer, then paint, but then I found out about Krylon fusion. Apparently it doesn't require any sanding or priming. Opinions and advice would be appreciated.
 
I personally have no experience with Krylon Fusion paint. Is it the one made especially for plastic? I saw some paint recently that was formulated for use on plastic lawn furniture etc. It might have been the Fusion stuff. I don't know how the Staton/Subaru plastic compares but I've painted several Titan shrouds using various rattle can paints. Degreasing is the important part, sanding and priming is needed if you're going for a very smooth finish. The shrouds have always taken paint very well but the fuel tanks are a different story. They're made from a different plastic than the shrouds and they tend to blister well after the paint is dry. Don't ask me why.
Tom
 
I painted the shroud on my HuaSheng with Fusion,,,turned out pretty nice, I think :)
not sure about the robin, but I painted the inside as well because it is visible from the left side of the engine at certain angles ;)
 

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dumb question here, I have to remove the shroud first, right? Fusion is great paint, not only for plastic
 
I use good engine paint for the engine itself, Krylon plastic paint for the fan shroud & BBQ paint for the exhaust pipe... Here's a pic of a 'murdered out' 4-stroke bike that I recently built.
If I had a pic of the other side, you could see that the whole engine is black engine too. :/

vmbmurder4.jpg
 
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u can use any sparay paint on anything, i use 98 cents walmart paint on motors and it holds up great even under heat. u can buy the 98 cent primer also -lol however, for high heat apps, use the bbq paint or the rustoleum engine enamle. funny thing tho, it says on the rustoleum engine enamle its resistant to oil and fuel, i found out its all lies, that stuff came off fast when exposed to fuel, but holds up to oil great. but check this stuff out brother. http://www.ebay.com/itm/NEW-CAN-ED-...316?pt=LH_DefaultDomain_0&hash=item2c652fe794
 
I've tried several different BBQ black, and high heat paint brands. Most of them don't tolerate fuel spills very well.

The best brand I've tried is Dupli-Color Ceramic, 500 degree engine enamel. It resists fuel better then the others after it cures. Low Gloss Black rocks
 
dumb question here, I have to remove the shroud first, right? Fusion is great paint, not only for plastic

After you take it off hang it with a wire coat hanger so you can turn it around and hit it from all sides and it can dry with only the wire touching it. Hope you have a bug free place for it to dry as well. We used to wash parts in a phosphate shower before going thru a bake oven then parts got sprayed and baked again. This 100 degree weather is good for something LOL!

Just found this:

OVERVIEW:
Rust-Oleum Specialty Plastic Primer Spray prepares plastic for painting with any top coat. Apply directly to plastic mailboxes, lawn chairs, storage lockers and more. Adheres to hard-to-paint surfaces.
PRODUCT FEATURES:
Adheres to hard-to-paint surfaces
Renew or change the color of plastic items around the home
Choose from a variety of top coat colors

Tip:
Wipe down new surfaces with a paint thinner before applying.
 
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I've tried several different BBQ black, and high heat paint brands. Most of them don't tolerate fuel spills very well.

The best brand I've tried is Dupli-Color Ceramic, 500 degree engine enamel. It resists fuel better then the others after it cures. Low Gloss Black rocks

Thats the kind I use! (except I like the semi gloss). (^)



Also... Here's a pic of the other side of that engine.
vmbmurder6.jpg
 
I doubt if you painted like this video shows fuel is gonna mess with it very quick if ever http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xCyFqBtObvQ

I used to work a paint line & prepping is key you don't want to just spray paint on something without first prepping it unless you are like some Earl Scheib paint shop for used car salesmen that don't care what it looks like in a month. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PtjdHaMeiiQ

I friend of mine got a Earl Scheib paint job. They painted over the bird turds.
 
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