The whole paint thing was moving along, but really slowly, until I had this exchange with a coworker:
"Why are you painting it?"
"Because it's ORANGE!"
"No, I mean, why use paint?"
"To change the color?"
"Yeah, but why not vinyl wrap it?"
"Oh, I can't do that because...". Pause. "Heyyyyy...!"
So I went out and picked up some 3M 1080 Gloss Blue Metallic wrap from an eBay seller along with a felt-covered squeegee, some knifeless tape, a bottle of propane, a set of silicone kitchen spatulas, and some denatured alcohol.
I started out just under a month ago with a 2'x5' section of the blue by doing the flattest piece I could find: the gas door for the top of the faux tank. I had to do it twice because I didn't have the surface clean enough the first time and got a bunch of bumps in the vinyl, but once I tore off the vinyl, scraped the surface, and re-applied a fresh sheet, I had this:
I moved from that to one of the side box lids and wound up with this:
The lid was a real learning experience. I will probably go back and re-do it to get it right because I was foolishly trying to wrap the whole top with one sheet of vinyl and no seams. Maybe it can be done, but I'm not skilled enough to do that. By heating and stretching to get the wrinkles out of the corners, I managed to stretch a hole in the vinyl, so I had to cut out a section and put in a new piece to cover it, and then on the opposite corner, I just couldn't get the wrinkles out, so I had to do another cut. You can see one of the seams in the picture and it's fairly obvious, but I'm going to wait until everything else is completed before I try to lay new vinyl on it.
What I've found is that I can do a much better job with the vinyl than I am capable of doing with paint. It takes a lot less time for me, the house doesn't stink of paint, and I can go out and work on it for a little while at a time instead of being committed to a certain amount of work. Honestly, I don't think I'll ever try to use paint again.
Once I had those parts done, I realized that this was just the best way to go, so I ordered up another 30' of the blue plus a foot or so of some carbon fiber print for some of the trim work. Everything had to stop for a few days while I waited for the additional supplies.
I've been working on it for a couple hours a night, minus a week that I was in Vegas and minus the few days that I was waiting on the bigger roll to be shipped. Some of the parts have been pretty straightforward, but I've been pretty generous with the knifeless tape, putting in seams right on the corners and using multiple smaller pieces. I've experimented with some non-overlapping butt seams, but oddly they come out looking worse than when I use a 1-2mm overlap. With the butt seam, you get a pretty defined line, but with the overlap it just looks like more of a bump than a seam.
As of last night, I have three bits left to do: The flat trim panel that goes on the bottom of the top box, under the tail light; the left side box; and the part that will be done on the bike: the front fairing. I haven't checked in the last few days, but I think my estimate of 30' of vinyl may have been a bit high, but that will give me some extras to keep for repairs in the future, to re-do a couple trouble spots, and/or for other projects (I'm thinking matching helmets might be cool).
I also have the carbon fiber vinyl that I did the bottoms of the side covers in, and I may try to do the inside of the front fairing in order to spruce that up a little. We'll see, though. Once the vinyl wrap is complete, I'm going to look into getting some new chrome fasteners for the places where the bolts are visible. The existing bodywork will need to come off the bike, and I'll need to get the lights and reflectors installed on the wrapped parts. With the bodywork off, I'm going to send out the spare wheels for new tires and reseal and re-oil the suspension and put new brake pads on and change the brake fluid. Then I need to do the timing belts, change the coolant and oil, replace the seal on the gear shift, and put a new fan thermostat switch on. With the wheels back on and the fluids changed, I'll get the bodywork re-attached and be ready to go get a license plate.
Here's where it's at so far. By bye orange!
Side cover with carbon fiber accent:
Hanging the pieces on the bike for encouragement:
Future view from the top:
The hardest part on the bike. Took me about 4 hours yesterday: