Vinyl Wrap??
#1
Vinyl Wrap??
Has anyone had their bike vinyl wrapped?
I was starting to consider getting my bike painted next year, when in a fit of the obvious I thought, "Hey, what about vinyl wrap?"
So has anyone out there done it? I am talking about wrapping the entire bike either in a single color or with printed wrap.
Let me know what you think of it (would you do it again?) and please include some pics...
Thanks.
I was starting to consider getting my bike painted next year, when in a fit of the obvious I thought, "Hey, what about vinyl wrap?"
So has anyone out there done it? I am talking about wrapping the entire bike either in a single color or with printed wrap.
Let me know what you think of it (would you do it again?) and please include some pics...
Thanks.
#3
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Dezal (06-23-2019)
#4
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#8
Just NO. Not on a motorcycle.
Vinyl wrap is great for a promotional vehicle, a vehicle that the wrap wont be on long, or a company vehicle one doesnt care about.
Hard to get a wrap to lay flat on your tank too, but an experienced installer can get it to lay smooth. I have a good friend that has his Jeep wrapped to promote his business, and it was professionally installed by a place that all they do is wraps. When he first got it, it looked great! but now with ~8 months on it, the edges are pealing up, its faded, and split in a few places if you look close any where its on a body line, edge, or where door seems are etc. And when you take it off... you'll be left with the residue on your paint.
Vinyl wrap is great for a promotional vehicle, a vehicle that the wrap wont be on long, or a company vehicle one doesnt care about.
Hard to get a wrap to lay flat on your tank too, but an experienced installer can get it to lay smooth. I have a good friend that has his Jeep wrapped to promote his business, and it was professionally installed by a place that all they do is wraps. When he first got it, it looked great! but now with ~8 months on it, the edges are pealing up, its faded, and split in a few places if you look close any where its on a body line, edge, or where door seems are etc. And when you take it off... you'll be left with the residue on your paint.
#9
Just NO. Not on a motorcycle.
Vinyl wrap is great for a promotional vehicle, a vehicle that the wrap wont be on long, or a company vehicle one doesnt care about.
Hard to get a wrap to lay flat on your tank too, but an experienced installer can get it to lay smooth. I have a good friend that has his Jeep wrapped to promote his business, and it was professionally installed by a place that all they do is wraps. When he first got it, it looked great! but now with ~8 months on it, the edges are pealing up, its faded, and split in a few places if you look close any where its on a body line, edge, or where door seems are etc. And when you take it off... you'll be left with the residue on your paint.
Vinyl wrap is great for a promotional vehicle, a vehicle that the wrap wont be on long, or a company vehicle one doesnt care about.
Hard to get a wrap to lay flat on your tank too, but an experienced installer can get it to lay smooth. I have a good friend that has his Jeep wrapped to promote his business, and it was professionally installed by a place that all they do is wraps. When he first got it, it looked great! but now with ~8 months on it, the edges are pealing up, its faded, and split in a few places if you look close any where its on a body line, edge, or where door seems are etc. And when you take it off... you'll be left with the residue on your paint.
I'd tell your friend to take it back and have it fixed. I have had the company truck and our enclosed trailer wrapped for 9 years the first thing the installer asked me was how long do you intend to have it on? Is this a few month promotion or vehicle to be driven daily for advertising. The truck had the vinyl on for 5 years, the trailer had it on it for 6 years and we ended up having to replace a few panels. The truck we traded in for a new one and the enclosed trailer we still have. Vinyl wrap is similar to paint, you have maintain it but the good 3M vinyl will last a very very long time. The enclosed trailer would have lasted longer but it sat parked for about a year and the sun hit it everyday in the same spot and we didn't maintain it and by maintaining it all you need to do is wash it and actually put a little wax on it. I wouldn't be afraid of wrapping a motorcycle, like mentioned before it don't shine like gloss paint but it all depends on the look you are after.
#10
I tried to vinyl wrap an inexpensive trunk I had on my Suzuki Boulevard. Never done it before and it didn't go well, trunk just has too many facets, at least for my skills. Was trying to get the trunk to look more like the finish on the leather saddlebags. Ended up painting the trunk with Plasti-Dip, you can buy it in rattle cans, and it turned out great. Much easier than fighting with vinyl. If you go the Plasti-Dip route then cover it with clear coat, I used matte clear coat.