Powder Coating 101
The King stripped for powder
coating.
Photos by Bandit, Sin Wu and Nuttboy
(bad ones)
The plan was to strip the bike of all the
brackets, tabs and accessories we could get
our hands on and have them black powder
coated by Custom Powder Coating in Dallas a
Bikernet Sponsor.
We ordered additional accessories to
enhance the clean black effect. First we
ordered the Harley-Davidson black mag
wheels and floating rotors with black centers.
We pondered the front fender and trying to
black out all the trim. During research we
discovered, in the Winter P&A catalog,
brackets to allow a Fatboy fender to be bolted
in the King front end. The Fatboy fender is a
cleaner unit, but it still has rivets and ribs. We
opted for a solid black Street Stalker fender
that's clean as a whistle and light as a feather.
We also decided to switch the rear
turnsignals out for the new Screamin' Eagle
teardrops and the narrower light bar. When
they arrived we had to tear the lights down. We
cut the two plug wires in a staggered fashion.
The light bulb was then removed and we used
a coat hanger tool to hook the plastic base
and pull it out of the shell. Lastly we ordered
the Harley-Davidson fender, license plate
mount.
The first thing we did was to clear off our
bench and tape down a couple of large sheets
of paper. We organized every nut and bolt,
screw and spring.
I ordered the billet seat tab from the
catalog in the Multi-fit area. When I ordered a
slim seat it didn't come with a tab so I had to
move the tab each time I switched seats. I
powder coated both for more simple
assembly in the future.
Nuttboy and I started the process
removing the bags. I began the process of
removing all the bag brackets and roll bars.
Each time we removed a fastener we set it on
the sheet of paper and wrote a description.
We had to pop the plastic side panel
loose and take the seat off to get at the roll bar
fasteners.
This shows one of the bag bracket
fasteners that are inserted into the bag rails. I
thought about pulling them for fear that the
heat from the powder coating process would
weaken the spring tension. We tested the
theory by leaving some in place. We didn't
have a problem, either way.
On the left side I had to remove the
passenger footboard to take the derby cover
off. With each note on the sheet of paper we
listed the number of fasteners for each
application. The more information the better. I
had to remove the seat and the King side
panels to take the bag roll bars off. Many of
these items were held on with Torx bolts. It's a
good notion to buy a set.
This footboard had to go to reach the
derby fastener.
I started to remove the shift levers and
discovered that I had to remove the footboard
to reach the inspection cover Torx fasteners. I
wasn't sure if the footboards would have black
in their future. At first I reviewed the area of the
black board that would show, just the rim.
Then we turned the board over and studied
the way the rubber suspended pads were
installed. We discovered that the pads are
removed easily with a punch to the edges of
the bottom protruding rubber lips. The boards
went into the box for powder.
This was a simple process to tapping
the edges of the rubber with a large tap and
rubber hammer. We tried driving them out with
the tap first, through the center. That didn't
work.
The mechanic's law calls for one
screw or fastener to seize every time. We had
to drill out one of the inspection cover
screws.
I tried to take off the kickstand the old
fashioned way by removing the tooth then
pivoting the arm forward. The spring wouldn't
come loose. I had to remove all the fasteners.
Metric fasteners haunted me from time to
time, including the red Loctite touched horn
fasteners which were #10 metric sockets.
The Showa front end was covered with metric
12 point fasteners. It forced us to hit a
commercial tool shop for 12-point metric
sockets.
As the last of the fender rail parts came
off we marked the loop that carried the license
plate. We planned to replace the license plate
holder with a fender-mounted job that
attached below the taillight. We cut off the
existing license plate loop, then I brazed
washers and nuts so we could screw small
orange reflectors in place.
We marked the old license plate rail
with a felt pen so the cut would fall just under
the fender rail cover.
We didn't use these reflectors. We
were looking for Harley orange reflectors with
steel backs.
After a swapmeet run we had the right
stuff for the job.
Sin Wu wandered into the garage just as
I turned off the torch. She shuts down
productive activity wherever she goes. She
had a couple of alloy knitting needles that she
offered us. I discovered in short order that the
long alloy knitting needle worked perfectly for
removing the hard-to-reach cotter key behind
the brake pedal.
I had the toughest time retracting the
clevis pin from of the pedal that hinged on the
master cylinder piston. Finally it was removed
with a punch from under the frame. The brake
pedal caused me so much pain it didn't make
it into the powdercoating box. We painted it
with a rattle can after prepping.
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