Results 1 to 9 of 9

Thread: Can this be fixed?

  1. #1
    Join Date
    Jun 2005
    Location
    Des Moines, IA
    --
    1,303

    Can this be fixed?

    The crack on my ATC90 rear fender keeps growing, and I'm starting to see some sagging. Need to fix it soon. I've looked for replacement fenders, and these don't seem to exist anymore. On a plastic fender, I would drill a hole to keep the crack from going further, but this is an old fiberglass fender, and I don't know if that trick works.

    Does anybody have any experience with fixing these? I don't want to resort to zip ties on this one if I can help it....
    Attached Thumbnails Attached Thumbnails ATC90FenderCrack.jpg  
    Quote Originally Posted by fabiodriven View Post
    God knows they're not looking to make any effort to do anything, never mind move their foot to shift. If there was something that dispensed Cheetos every time they shifted that might be a different story. Welcome to America, where the biggest is best and even fat people who are too lazy to shift can climb a mountain.

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Aug 2002
    Location
    NY
    --
    2,652
    When you first saw the crack you should have drilled a small hole at the end of the crack to prevent it from continuing.But it is fiberglass.So go and get a fiberglass guy to fix it.Or get one of those kits and do it yourself!!.

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Jun 2008
    Location
    NE Indiana
    --
    1,067
    Yeah, since it's fiberglass you can use bondo or that fiberglass stuff from Wal mart. Should fix it right up.

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Apr 2008
    Location
    somerset ma
    --
    1,822
    go down to your local hardware store and pick yourself up some shoo goo, put it on the bottom side of the fenders, it drys clear and its pretty rugged stuff, plus it allows the plastic to flex also, I used it on my 350X front fender and it worked great
    My rides, 1985 ATC 350X, With legit Lamborghini Countach paint,2003 Harley Davidson FXDL Dyna Low Rider,customised the way I like it! 1997 GMC Sierra is gone, primary mode of transportation, 2008 Toyota Yaris!

    Check out my build thread of my 350X
    http://www.3wheelerworld.com/showthread.php?95389-Tank-s-1985-350X-build-is-FINALLY-all-done!-)
    Screw giving away the Harley, It's payed for!!

  5. #5
    300rman's Avatar
    300rman is offline My other user 3WW ID was Nitebiker07. Teaching quads a lesson
    Join Date
    Nov 2007
    Location
    toledo
    --
    2,667
    dont use bondo. it will break off.

    fiberglass it up from the underside, then use Duraglass to fill it in from the top.
    sand, repaint, VIOLA! crack-be-gone.

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Jun 2005
    Location
    Des Moines, IA
    --
    1,303
    I knew bondo wasn't good for structural repairs. I'll go the fiberglass route, but I'm afraid it's going to end up being a winter project, with all the other stuff going on. Can I drill a hole to keep it from worsening, or does that not work on fiberglass?
    Quote Originally Posted by fabiodriven View Post
    God knows they're not looking to make any effort to do anything, never mind move their foot to shift. If there was something that dispensed Cheetos every time they shifted that might be a different story. Welcome to America, where the biggest is best and even fat people who are too lazy to shift can climb a mountain.

  7. #7
    Join Date
    Dec 2004
    Location
    Baltimore, MD
    --
    6,088
    The drilling the hole method is ok for a small crack, but if the crack is as big as yours and it is in a stress area, like around the seat where there is wait, drilling the hole won't help now. The only way is to repair the fiberglass. If you ride anymore on those fenders, the will crack worse. To repair the crack, besides having the fiberglass repair kit, you will have to clean and sand the top and bottom of the fenders. The bottom of the fenders is where you really want to build up the fiberglass repair the most. The top of the fenders around the crack, you will want to actually sand down some lower than the surrounding area, so when you add your fiberglass and resin, it will actually be filling in a small valley if that makes any sense. If not, once painted, the top fender repair will stick out like a sore thumb as it will be a raised area. And if you just add fiberglass over the unprepped top fender, when you go to sand the area down, you will be removing your repair which is really no good at all. If you know anyone who works at a boat repair shop, they should be familiar with repairing fiberglass if you don't think that you can handle the job. But you really need to repair those fenders, before they are at the point of being unfixable, which they are quickly approaching that point now.

  8. #8
    Join Date
    Aug 2008
    Location
    north carolina, usa
    --
    40

    Super Glue It

    my cousins done that i just got a lot of super-glue until i had time to go get some stuff to actually fix it the right way super-glue or that paint on kind in the brown bottle.

  9. #9
    Join Date
    Jun 2008
    Location
    NE Indiana
    --
    1,067
    Quote Originally Posted by 300rman View Post
    dont use bondo. it will break off.

    fiberglass it up from the underside, then use Duraglass to fill it in from the top.
    sand, repaint, VIOLA! crack-be-gone.
    I meant that he could use Bondo brand fiberglass repair stuff that they carry at wal mart. they also have some other brand of fiberglass stuff too. Don't use regular bondo. Bondo is actually a brand name by the way.

//ArrowChat Integreation Code //