Be glad to. It is rather lengthy, so bare with me.
My airbox was in comparatively good shape in that it didn’t have any holes or cracks in the plastic.
Superficially though, the plastic was scratched and gouged and the hardware corroded.
I started by removing all the hardware by grinding off the pop and flat head rivets. Be careful here
because the heat build in the rivet from grinding will melt the surrounding plastic. So be patient and
go slow. I wired brushed and polished the hardware to prep it for cad plating with gold chromate.
I purchased replacement cad plated flat head rivets from
http://www.rapidrivet.comThe plastic got a thorough bath and degreasing with a plastic specific cleaner called Scuff Magic.
The airbox is formed out of polypropolene (pp) plastic which requires substrate specific chemicals
to restore. The next step is to clean any remaining residue or oils with Super Clean Plastic Cleaner.
The box is now prepped for repair work. I scuffed the surface with 180 grit paper on a DA sander.
Prep the areas that need repair with 1060FP adhesion promoter then fill the scratches and cuts with
2000-T flex filler which is well suited for pp. Now go over the repaired areas with 80 grit on a sanding
block (profiling) then hit the box again with the DA using 180, 240 and 320 sandpaper. Blow off the
box with compressed air.
Now you are ready to add texture and color. Spray the box with 1050 Plastic Magic adhesion promoter
to prep the pp to accept the texture. If you have a spray gun, use a 1.5 tip to apply the 3800-4 Flex
Tex (practice on some cardboard squares to get the desired results first). If you don’t have a spray gun,
you can use a Prevail sprayer (an aerosol cartridge on a reusable bottle) available at many home supply
stores. Once dry, lightly rub with a medium scuff pad to remove any dry spray.
Finish the job by spraying the box with 3300-A Flexible bumper finish in satin black.
Once you have the hardware plated, dip the hook ends of the cover retaining brackets in black plasti-dip
to recoat, then install the hardware using pop and solid rivets.
All the chemicals I have listed are available from Urethane Supply Company
http://www.urethanesupply.com a good source for supplies and information.
If your hardware is in good shape, you can simply mask it and concentrate on the plastic.
Total time involved in the plastic resto is approx. 4 hours, total cost of job specific supplies approx. $100.
I will post some before, during and after pics of the resto as soon as I get a chance.
If you have any question, let me know.
dogger