

1973 GT750 on the left, 1977 GT500 on the right.
Moderators: oldjapanesebikes, H2RICK, Suzsmokeyallan
Actually - for small parts, you can do this in a regular electric oven. When I was picking up my Ikon shocks for the two GT750's from Wolfgang's Laverda shop in Nakusp, he showed me his small parts powder coating setup, and the oven looked to be just a regular Kenmore from Sears !TLRam1 wrote:What would keep individuals from doing this in their ovens at home? Is there an art to the spraying?
Thanks Dave - appreciated. I'm not in your league yet, but I'm learning !Suzukidave wrote:Ian , i was just checking out your very nice web site . That was great work you did on the GT750 in your avatar
Good to know, I was thinking of the kitchen oven.oldjapanesebikes wrote:Actually - for small parts, you can do this in a regular electric oven. When I was picking up my Ikon shocks for the two GT750's from Wolfgang's Laverda shop in Nakusp, he showed me his small parts powder coating setup, and the oven looked to be just a regular Kenmore from Sears !TLRam1 wrote:What would keep individuals from doing this in their ovens at home? Is there an art to the spraying?
Of course, it wasn't good for anything else - like cooking food - so I wouldn't recommend doing this in your kitchen ....