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Valid arguments for both points.My thoughts for the "carpet queen" bunch is to build at least 1 bike & bloody well ride it.You`ve no excuse,unless you`re dead
I love it when a chick p1sses in her jeans.
i don't think there's any rule book as such for restoring BMX parts and bikes........you build a bike with parts and colours that you as an individual like or love.i don't have any real oppinions on wheather a bike should be thrashed or hung on a wall......at the end of the day you do whatever floats your boat.i do however (and this is only myself) believe that there are a few things that should never be done.1. paint tuffs (either buy a set in that colour, bleach them or dye them) people have spent decades trying to rectify this from BITD2. repair a frame and powder over it, then selling it on without bringing this to the buyers attention (Just not cricket)but if it's your bike/part you can however build it and do with it, whatever you want to
i love to see surviour bikes it give the true meaning to old school bmx . but to get a load of old rusty chipped paint work stickers missing and bring it back to shop window quality is a massive buzz
Its a difficult game this. But by far - Patience is the keyFIRSTLY - I've made my fair share of mistakes (mostly from being impatient)I think you should do the very best that you can.If you need a 'gold tuf neck' and you have a 'blue' one, then you should try your hardest to trade it or find a replacement 1st.If that fails and its 'not' NOS then I see no reason why it can't be re-anodized as it would have been originally.One of my bains at the moment is people mirror polishing stuff - Most old school alloy would have been Satin finish, which in its own right looks stunning.I could go on and on but I think you probably get the general gist of where I'm coming from.
Quote from: diesel on October 01, 2009, 12:00 PMIts a difficult game this. But by far - Patience is the keyFIRSTLY - I've made my fair share of mistakes (mostly from being impatient)I think you should do the very best that you can.If you need a 'gold tuf neck' and you have a 'blue' one, then you should try your hardest to trade it or find a replacement 1st.If that fails and its 'not' NOS then I see no reason why it can't be re-anodized as it would have been originally.One of my bains at the moment is people mirror polishing stuff - Most old school alloy would have been Satin finish, which in its own right looks stunning.I could go on and on but I think you probably get the general gist of where I'm coming from.Can only agree with this, I like restoring parts but I always try to make them look like they used to but necessarily like they should if I was a professional polisher Get the historical argument about preservation, too. But who else will "enjoy" something NOS in the packet if he's not a collector ?Will it even be more enjoyable in 10 years ? God knows...Anyways, yeah kids bikes, so each to their own I presume, have fun in what you do, either trashing an oldschool ride or keeping some carpet queen away from dust...