Mr Muscle .... Protecting the Helmet
Mr Muscle .... Protecting the Helmet
Author
Discussion

jim meehan

Original Poster:

1,104 posts

263 months

Monday 22nd March 2004
quotequote all
What are the options for cleaning and waterproofing the hood? Any tried & tested?

..... Add - on rubber seals for the closure bits to resist ingress? ( that's right, had the first of many days out in Wales )

And as I discovered by experiment t'other day mr muscle ( orange ) with some light rubbing with the fingers brings off the road grime a treat. Rinse and apply polish. And that's on arctic white, so just imagine what it'll do for the more vibrant variety

new photo's on prof. by the way - no ambiguity there I trust Stever?

jmorgan

36,010 posts

306 months

Monday 22nd March 2004
quotequote all
I use Thompson water proof brick sealer. The one where it says it does camping ground sheets as well. Not tried the others but Thompsons stinks for a short while. Does the job though.

Wacky Racer

40,477 posts

269 months

Monday 22nd March 2004
quotequote all
jmorgan said:
I use Thompson water proof brick sealer. The one where it says it does camping ground sheets as well. Not tried the others but Thompsons stinks for a short while. Does the job though.



A similar cheaper alternative is a good clear silicone aerosol such as "fabsil", available at any good army and navy store, sports shop or outdoor shop...

Price around £4.99

It can SLIGHTLY darken some fabrics though.....

jvaughan

6,025 posts

305 months

Monday 22nd March 2004
quotequote all
to clean and restore the hood, use Renovo Hood restorer. absolutly wicked results ...

to waterproof, I use "Fabsil". buy in a litre can from Milletts or other outdoor specialist. Give it a few good heavy coats (avoid the paintwork and rear window) and allow to dry.

I do mine one a year

dickymint

28,209 posts

280 months

Monday 22nd March 2004
quotequote all
jvaughan said:
to clean and restore the hood, use Renovo Hood restorer. absolutly wicked results ...

to waterproof, I use "Fabsil". buy in a litre can from Milletts or other outdoor specialist. Give it a few good heavy coats (avoid the paintwork and rear window) and allow to dry.

I do mine one a year


Hope its good Jeff cos I bought the kit £45 for cleaner, restorer, waterproofer and plastic screen polish. Havent tried it yet cos I'm gonna wait untill I've swapped the nearly new roof from the 350 onto the SEAC.

jim meehan

Original Poster:

1,104 posts

263 months

Monday 22nd March 2004
quotequote all

Thanks fellas. Jason - " 24 mpg " from 400se?! Had mine 2 weeks and , allowing for fuel swingometer & approximations plus some thrills over 3000rpm, getting between 16 - 20, combined town & runs. Should I be optimistic that the specialist can spot sumat's up when we go on friday?

wedg1e

27,002 posts

287 months

Monday 22nd March 2004
quotequote all
jim meehan said:

Should I be optimistic that the specialist can spot sumat's up when we go on friday?


Doubt it. My 390 averages 18 mpg....

Ian

jvaughan

6,025 posts

305 months

Monday 22nd March 2004
quotequote all
on a long distance drive, mid to high 20's is achieveable. on a good blast, expect sub 20's.. if you screw it, expect single figures.

I can recommend 100% the Renovo stuff, the hoot revivor is awsome stuff. Mine has had 6 coats now and looks practically brand new.

The rear screen polish works a treat too.

jmorgan

36,010 posts

306 months

Monday 22nd March 2004
quotequote all
What's mpg? 1/4 full and its time to put more in. I have done a long run and guestimated 15.

shpub

8,507 posts

294 months

Tuesday 23rd March 2004
quotequote all
jmorgan said:
What's mpg? 1/4 full and its time to put more in. I have done a long run and guestimated 15.

I now use gpm... Sprinting at North Weald on Sunday, the 520 used 10 litres to do 4 x 1.3 mile runs...

streaky

19,311 posts

271 months

Tuesday 23rd March 2004
quotequote all
I was disappointed when I read this thread. From the title, I expected something much earthier - Streaky

rev-erend

21,596 posts

306 months

Tuesday 23rd March 2004
quotequote all
streaky said:
I was disappointed when I read this thread. From the title, I expected something much earthier - Streaky


Streaky - you are not on the BBW site now

jim meehan

Original Poster:

1,104 posts

263 months

Tuesday 23rd March 2004
quotequote all
Streaky, see 'SE contacts' for a somwhat unexpected line, from stever, which you may appreciate. He had a point, hence the changed foto. ( thanks again Ted ) Was hilarious at the time mind.

>> Edited by jim meehan on Tuesday 23 March 21:55

stever

1,571 posts

271 months

Wednesday 24th March 2004
quotequote all
jim meehan said:
Streaky, see 'SE contacts' for a somwhat unexpected line, from stever, which you may appreciate. He had a point, hence the changed foto. ( thanks again Ted ) Was hilarious at the time mind.

>> Edited by jim meehan on Tuesday 23 March 21:55


Jim, I think you should have kept the old photo too, Wedges have that sort of effect on a lot of us

jim meehan

Original Poster:

1,104 posts

263 months

Sunday 4th April 2004
quotequote all
As Shadowfax needs 4 tyres and rear bearings, Renovo - despite the great vibes - had to take a back seat to having a go with:

Astonish - shampoo for carpet cleaners. Stains came up no probs. ( <5% nonionic surfactants, amphoteric surfactants, NTA (!?)).

Then waterproofed with 2 coats of Thompson's "the world's best " etc. And when dried, noticed a bubble on hard top where canvass has lifted from the base. This is at a point where there was a tear, 3mm diamater in fabric. Gonna use warm air drier to see if can excite old glue into life - if not, will adhesive ( ? rubber based ) thru syringe do the job?