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• #2
cut-it back and give it a polish.
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• #3
Cool, thanks dogsballs.
Gonna give it a go at t'weekend.
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• #4
i'd leave it, it's only gonna keep on happening.
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• #5
I'd bead blast them off.
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• #6
haha
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• #7
i'd leave it, it's only gonna keep on happening.
True dat.
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• #8
i've done it a few times on my black frame, comes up a treat!
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• #9
Buy two identical bikes, ride one, let it get fucked up and keep the other in a humidity controlled glass cabinet.
(Or, T-cut it as suggested - works wonders on minor stuff)
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• #10
cut-it back and give it a polish.
I've got the same problem. what do you mean 'cut it back'?
hello by the way - didn't get a chance to say hi on sat. -
• #11
I've got the same problem. what do you mean 'cut it back'?
hello by the way - didn't get a chance to say hi on sat.
hallo! you were to busy being loud :pwhen you polish the paint on your car, you usually use a cutting compound that takes the existing layer of polish or crap from the paint. then you use a polish to put on top ie karate kid, wax on wax off. Or just use a 2 in 1 polish. i've got some if you want to borrow.
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• #12
I'd bead blast them off.
I found this particularly funny for some reason..probably cos it was particularly funny.
I've been riding my beautiful lovely new shiny bike in London for about a month now and its started to pick up ugly nasty dirty bastard scratches all over the paintwork. Bah!
What's the best way to get rid of 'em and protect the paintwork? T-cut? Touchup paint?
They are only small and cosmetic, but I'm still in the rather anal, protective stage of new bike ownership. It wears off after a while...
Ta