Yes very true. I believe even if you did blast it, this would still be an 
issue unfortunately.

On Friday, March 18, 2016 at 12:21:12 PM UTC-4, Grant @ Rivendell wrote:
>
> I am not fluent here and tried to respond to other comments about it, then 
> gave up and thought I could do it here & this way...wondering all the while 
> whether this is what "thread thwacking" is.  Anyway, this isn't the last 
> word on it, just our experience and observations.
>
> It looks best and the way you want it to look if the frame is not blasted 
> after building. Then you get the fire marks and general variegation that 
> gets the blood flowing. If the frame is blasted after building and you 
> clear coat over that, it looks like boring metallic gray with some 
> brass-colored pinstriping (if lugs). Nobody will say *hey, cool;* they'll 
> just think, *hey, kinda boring*.
>
> Clear coat is porous, which means water gets thru it and causes rust. We 
> had a local powder coater assure us that it had an ultranew and 
> supereffective way to protect the metal from rust, but it didn't work. 
> Inland bikes, no big problem, but if you live in a sugar shack on 
> Chesapeake Bay, it won't last.
>
> Powder coating, wet painting, no matter. Powder coating isn't the 
> "bulletproof, no-nonsense, thanks for not making me have to think about 
> anything" solution it is sometimes portrayed as. It was developed for thick 
> steel tractors, as a durable, chip-resistant layer. The proble, besides 
> being pourous, is that with powder there is no primer to help fight rust 
> and protect the metal when it does chip. And powder coatings tends to have 
> more micro-cracks than wet paint. When the paint is opaque, it's easy to 
> assume all's well underneath, but when it's clear, you can actually see 
> what's happening.
>
> If clear-coating was a GREAT idea, we'd offer it. It's used on show bikes 
> sometimes as a novelty and to show how great the metal looks, but if the 
> air is humid or salty or it rains a lot or something like that, it's not 
> fantastic...in our experience here, at least.
>
>

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