And you should never store swimming pool chemicals any where near things metal you value. I bought a house with pool and the dummy before me stored his pool chemicals right beneath the electrical circuit breaker box (big no no). I moved the chemicals out to a plastic storage bin by the pool. It was eating up lawn equipment in the storage building next to it (with the lids fastened). Strong stuff chlorine.....hmm....and we drink water laced with it.
Criswell
Sent from my iPhone
On Apr 30, 2010, at 3:40 PM, mark ward wrote:
You should Never use Undiluted Bleach on any thing. (for 1 it don't take that much. But mostly will hurt your bike.) with Over 10 years of servicing Commercial food Equipment. Bleach is used to sanitize dish's In STAINLESS STEEL dish mach's. I have SEEN many stainless steel item's eaten away from drips of Bleach. (and floors) Mark (w.Mich)
[b]From:[/b] John Biccum
[b]To:[/b] Michael Martin
[b]Cc:[/b] DSN_KLR650@yahoogro
ups.com
[b]Sent:[/b] Fri, April 30, 2010 4:27:49 PM
[b]Subject:[/b] Re: [DSN_KLR650] Plastic Rehab
The mold etc are living organisms. Cheap chlorine bleach might kill them so their carcasses would rinse right off. I'd sure try that before any more labor intensive methods. If it were my bike I'd put undiluted bleach in a "trigger pump" style sprayer and let the little buggers have it.
Household bleach is about 1/2 of one percent chlorine and 99 1/2 percent water, chlorine is a great mold killer.
On 4/30/2010 9:05 AM, Michael Martin wrote: Don,
I would expect that any mild abrasive polish, such as would be used to return a pink KLR to its original red color, would work for your problem. I used Meguiar's ScratchX, but it is *extremely* labor intensive. Maybe someone else has a better product to suggest.
Mike Martin,
Louisville, KY
Pinkish A19
[b]From:[/b] spike55_bmw [url=http://yahoo.com]yahoo.com[/url]>[b][/b]
This thing sat outside unprotected in northcentral Pennsylvania and the the more horizontal surfaces are spickled with dark discoloration from mold / mildew / algae stuff.
Any ideas on products / procedures that might address this sort of discoloration short of sanding or painting with Krylon for flex-plastic?