Painting the inside of bodywork not only looks cool, but is definitely faster than even rim tape. What’s the best procedure/before or after the outside?
We always used black farm implement roll on paint. Doesn't take very long, and definitely looks better..
We do that on nice jobs where weights not an issue, murder the bodywork BEFORE you start prepping it. Back mask some areas or just touch up any overspray with black rattlecan when the jobs done.
I was on a Yosh replica TL1000R that I had. Let's be really clear about weight. That was one girl who was never gonna be skinny
I usually just use a cheap rattlecan black on the inside after paint. If you are using professional equipment and paints, it seems to be a pain in the butt to keep overspray from getting on the inside. I don't even mask off the fresh paint when I spray the black rattle can on. If you get a little on the fresh paint, just wipe it off with naptha or a similar thinner quickly. Mild solvents wont hurt cured quality paints.
I have never once thought about what the inside of my body panels looked like until I realized some thermal insulation was required...
Ya I mean there is definitely weight added, but to be completely honest I think it helped the fairings crash. We always used to use sharkskinz, and fixing it was noticeably easier. It added like what, at the absolute most a pound. It looked way cleaner, and it held up better, probably because implement paint is thick AF. 1 pound won’t hurt me a bit, hell 20 pounds, I bet money I go the exact same speed. This is what I noticed anyways, results may vary.
Thanks all for the responses. It’s probably easier to mask off the convex outside surfaces than the concave inside surfaces. I just like the look of a flat black interior.