Although I thought I would need help with the project I ended up being able to do the whole thing solo. A time consuming yet rewarding project that has probably made me appreciate the bike even more. It started with a good cleaning, followed by lots and lots of rust removal, and then tightening bolts, oiling the chain, pumping the tires, and adjusting of the brake pads. But most of the work was removing all that rust.
I used a metal polish/cleaner that Jeff had kickin' around called Peek. I let the cream sit on the rust for a few minutes and then rubbed and scrubbed with a rag and fine wet/dry sandpaper. The cream not only helped remove the rust but made all the metal nice and shiny. Topped off with leather grips hand stitched by Amy Kenny and a bell from DBH that makes the sound 'ding-dong'.
7 comments:
Looking good! Thank you for the tip on removing the rust. I have some patches on my bike and this has motivated me to remove them!
Your grips are great! Love the pannier, too.
Looks great! Such a nice bike.
It looks beautiful. It must have been so satisfying to restore all by yourself.
I am going to get some of that metal cleaner. I also have some stubborn rusty bits that I have been avoiding because it seems like such hard work to remove.
Great job! I've bought a used cruiser and took it into a bike shop where they teach you how to fix them up yourself. It definitely does make you appreciate the bike more when you work on the individual parts. I want those leather grips!
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