Author Topic: 1974 maico  (Read 10580 times)

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Offline 2 shocks

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1974 maico
« on: February 04, 2018, 02:13:10 pm »

Would anybody know the frame colour or number for 74 Maico

Thanks

Ken Baker

Offline 80-85 husky

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Re: 1974 maico
« Reply #1 on: February 05, 2018, 12:57:52 pm »
Big K will for sure.. pm him

Offline KTM47

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Re: 1974 maico
« Reply #2 on: February 06, 2018, 12:07:55 pm »
Sliver but what number the is I don't know.
MAICOS RULE DESPITE THE FOOLS

1999 KTM 200, 1976/77 KTM 400,1981 Maico 490

Offline Nebo

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Re: 1974 maico
« Reply #3 on: February 07, 2018, 01:53:35 pm »
OEM MAICO Frame Paint.

     First Coat White Primer.  Then Gloss Black. Top Coat Silver Grey.
   
   
      The Silver/Grey may have been a VW color.  As was the Orange, Yellow,and Red Tank colors.

      I think the Brand was Dupont or BASF.

      I cannot remember the Formula.



Offline Maicosammler

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Re: 1974 maico
« Reply #4 on: February 10, 2018, 08:11:04 am »
In 1974 Maico switched the frame colour from black to silver. Tell me the frame-# so I can tell you the colour of the bike.

Black was standard RAL 9005.
Silver was a one-coat varnish for car rims like this https://www.ebay.de/itm/162355384269

Regards Ulrich

--> http://www.classic-motorrad.de/galerie/thumbnails.php?album=lastupby&uid=2278


« Last Edit: February 10, 2018, 08:14:14 am by Maicosammler »

Offline Mick D

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Re: 1974 maico
« Reply #5 on: February 10, 2018, 01:48:18 pm »
There are hundreds of silvers, just like there are hundreds of whites.

OEM MAICO Frame Paint.

     First Coat White Primer.  Then Gloss Black. Top Coat Silver Grey.

Definitely NOT Nebo. I scored a brand new 74 Non LTR as a young child in 74. I still have it.
My late brother bought a 75, I now own it.
I have an original unrestored 125 LTR. I have several original 76AW frames.

All of the three bikes above and the frames have silver only on them. No Primer, No blake, silver only, straight onto the bare metal.
I have owned 9 VW's, turned 3 into Dune buggies. Parted of rims, rolled and welded in wideners for balloon tyres. I can attest the Maico frame silver was/is a match to the VW wheel silver of the day.

I do not know who "Maicosammler" is? but it is great to see a breath of truth and accuracy come to this forum. This thread is a good example of how historical truth becomes lost with opinion and miss-information as years go by.
In 1974 Maico switched the frame colour from black to silver. Tell me the frame-# so I can tell you the colour of the bike.

Black was standard RAL 9005.
Silver was a one-coat varnish for car rims like this https://www.ebay.de/itm/162355384269

Regards Ulrich

--> http://www.classic-motorrad.de/galerie/thumbnails.php?album=lastupby&uid=2278




Welcome Maicosammler!
"light weight, and it works great"  :)

Offline Momus

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Re: 1974 maico
« Reply #6 on: February 10, 2018, 02:27:22 pm »
I remember reading about the white/black/silver scheme in a Maico restoration story written by Terry Good the US works bike collector.
Sounded unlikely for the factory to go to pointless trouble with multiple coats so I assumed it was because that particular bike had a frame color history.
If you love it, lube it.

Offline Mick D

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Re: 1974 maico
« Reply #7 on: February 10, 2018, 09:38:44 pm »
Suppose I could have been more polite in my previous reply.

I remember reading about the white/black/silver scheme in a Maico restoration story written by Terry Good the US works bike collector.
Sounded unlikely for the factory to go to pointless trouble with multiple coats so I assumed it was because that particular bike had a frame color history.

Yes I do not think Maico went to the trouble of making an exception for one bike.
I read that too at the time.
Trouble is with interwed overload? Sometimes there is new info to learn, sometimes the info is wrong. To many better things to do than debate, research or argue.
  GB for example accounts that when his works bikes were built/supplied, they were supplied with a few little tricks here and there, but basically not much different than production. They were just selective of the best parts. Like using the crank which was "truest" etc.
 
In regard to comments about paint? I don't think it is a matter of a deceptive opinion. I probably should have said that and been way more polite Nebo. I believe it is more likely a matter of a floored or "miss-judged" observation. ie; It appeared to be several different built up coats when lightly sanding back the original frame paint. 

How to explain? ? ? ? WET liquid Paint is an "emulsification" of other base substances and products of certain dissimilar values. The emulsification is the stirring forced mixing process, just like when small amounts of cooling water intrude into the sump of a car engine. If drained immediately, it appears as a milkish "homogeneous" solution(has been emulsified). Let it stand overnight, it is then obvious that it has seperated back to mainly heavier water at the bottom and an oily sludge on top. Leave it for years in a sealed container, then the observation is that is has nearly returned to the original two substances.

Not to the same extent, though to a degree the same goes for paints, Especially one coat silver wheel paint. Paints are explained as an "emulsification" of sub components. I bought some of those one liter German paints from Aldi when they first appeared years back. I used it on a trailer repair. All paint has to be stirred before application because it separates whilst stored.
I am sure we have all seen the layer and depth of clear lacquer on top when opening a tin that has sat for 6 months. Now no matter how long you stir this SILVER paint for with a blender in a drill. THE VERY MOMENT YOU STOP, WHAT APPEARS ARE FINE STREAKS OF BLACK SPIRALLING IN A VORTEX PATTERN BACK TO THE CENTER SHAFT OF THE 2,800 RPM STIRRER. Does not matter how long you stir it for or how long in a paint shop shaker. It always immediately shows separation and the lines of black. Put a drop onto a surface get your jeweler's loupe out and observe the fine black line at the outer edge.

 OK, so this trailer lives out on the street in the elements. I gave it one coat of this silver onto the newly welded "duragal" piece. I did a very quick rush Job. NO PRIMER OK! Only one quick brush coat, FULL STOP!   

I just scrapped of a couple of flakes. I have turned one of them over, so we can see what it Appears like on the underside as it dried all them years ago.
« Last Edit: February 10, 2018, 10:35:30 pm by Mick D »
"light weight, and it works great"  :)

Offline Mick D

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Re: 1974 maico
« Reply #8 on: February 10, 2018, 09:38:55 pm »


Two flakes of the very same silver paint, that I did only one coat with a $2 throw away BRUSH. I have turned one flake upside down. What do we see "observe"? It appears to be grey etch primer, but the top to atmosphere dried flake appears as silver gloss finish. Don't figure?
 By design. One coat paint technology by design.

I have always believed the same went for these silver framed Maicos,,,
As a Kid, I wet sanded that frame many times. If you blink you will miss the very fine separation of black witness between the silver gloss upper and the greyish under level,,, It is just the way the Emulsified WET products separate as applied and then dry. Try it.
« Last Edit: February 10, 2018, 10:09:20 pm by Mick D »
"light weight, and it works great"  :)

Offline Mick D

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Re: 1974 maico
« Reply #9 on: February 10, 2018, 10:21:18 pm »
Incidentally I bought that Silver paint from Aldi with one thing in mind. To see if it was a close match
to those silver Maico frames? It is!

Obviously another thing that I never got around to.

I Should have done a test and then left it out in the weather to see how it stands up. By spraying a fine grey etch on to a mechanically etched surface, as it dries to touch, spray it straight away with this Aldi silver and as it dries to tachy dry, spray it again with that new Expensive HARD clear rattle can that Supercheap Auto sell.

Don't Know if they are compatible products to mix/apply, but the color of this Aldi Silver is a near to perfect color Match.
« Last Edit: February 10, 2018, 10:31:57 pm by Mick D »
"light weight, and it works great"  :)

Offline Mick D

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Re: 1974 maico
« Reply #10 on: February 10, 2018, 10:48:36 pm »
There is a very old retiring paint expert opposite me. I will give him an original NOS Maico Silver piece during the week and leave it with him for a return opinion without briefing him on this discussion. He can scrape it, sand it, do what he like with it to give me his impression.

This guy is a master paint and panel genius of exotica. I have watched his work for exactly thirty years.
The rarity of the vintage bikes and cars has been phenomenal.

Ok to speak of it now Security wise, because he is into his seventies, emptied the joint and retired.
I watched him with an "English Wheel" Make/fabricated and sat there with a mask on and watch him oxy weld aluminium panels on those Austin Healey bugeye sprite things etc. Such a genius talent.
Very sad to see him retire, I will miss his company and knowledge immensely.

He is old school.
He is the reason I can Oxy Weld Aluminium.   
« Last Edit: February 10, 2018, 10:56:22 pm by Mick D »
"light weight, and it works great"  :)

Offline 80-85 husky

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Re: 1974 maico
« Reply #11 on: February 11, 2018, 05:08:20 pm »
i lived up the road from "one of them" ive watched him make two cars from scratch other than factory blueprints..and while making one was a year long obsession, he took time off to rebuild a rusty old MGA into a gleaming black rocketship...for fun! He does not have internet, still calls everyone one on the old ph in his shed...amazing bloke, a true craftsman..can rebuild precision engines, lathe up any part, casts his own mag wheels, does fibre glass, metal work, chassis fabrication, shockers, upgrades std brakes with big piston kits etc electrical wiring fuel injection, both types, unreal skills..he has a mate who rebuilds 18 cyl aero radials for fun....not many about anymore

Offline Mick D

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Re: 1974 maico
« Reply #12 on: February 14, 2018, 11:48:59 am »
Amazing skills there Husky.

Spoke to Geoff, showed him some genuine original Maico items.
His opinion is similar to Maicosammler's.

Geoff said straight away it's too thin to be more than one coat. Too thin to be layered up from multiple coats.
He said most car wheel silvers on steel are single coat applications. Less prone to chipping than thick composition of multiple coats.

Maico were proudly producing bikes under the 100Kg mark.
Why then would they add a build up of three layered WEIGHT for a so called works bike?
Doesn't make any sense. Someone may have done it since? I doubt it would have been Maico.

I am with Geoff, Maicosammler and my own "firsthand" experience on this one.
Incidentally, I have most color Maicos. Geoff had given me a VW color chart years ago, misplaced ATM.
I checked every color at the time, There was/is a silver on it that matched perfectly,,, probably the wheel silver?

"light weight, and it works great"  :)

Offline Maicosammler

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Re: 1974 maico
« Reply #13 on: February 15, 2018, 09:55:11 am »


Even the typical corrosion of the silver framed bikes shows that there is only one layer of paint.  :)

This 1974½ was produced 1974, january 18 for Australia, picture belongs to Mark F..