Rohan said:Roy Bacons book on restoring Nortons sez
1969. R - petrol tank in fireflake red or sapphire blue
blah blah silver sidecover and oil tank.
Note that tanks back then were fibreglass, so the color was in the gelcoat.
Rohan said:Assuming you still have the original tank !
Have a look inside the tank, through the tank cap.
You may still be able to see a trace of the initial color. ?
Might need a strong light, to light up the fibreglass inside.
Watch out for fuel fumes, you don't want to fire it up or breathe that stuff !
DogT said:I tried to take the black paint off my flake blue tank (Apr 69) and it turned sort of blue/silver. The blue came off mostly with the paint.
B+Bogus said:DogT said:The R type tank would have been silver flake (not a colour - just aluminium flakes) with candy red topcoat, so potentially salvageable.
Rohan said:B+Bogus said:DogT said:The R type tank would have been silver flake (not a colour - just aluminium flakes) with candy red topcoat, so potentially salvageable.
Roy Bacons Norton Resto book sez it was Fireflake Red for the 1969 Type R,
so would it have had a red topcoat ??
CandyApple Red v's Fireflake Red has been discussed before.
Fireflake Red didn't appear too much - one/two seasons only ? - but CandyApple Red made a few appearances...
B+Bogus said:Agreed Fireflake Red was not done for long (68-70?), but Candy red first appeared for the 850, I believe. This was over a regular silver base though.
Looking at photos of early red/silver Fastbacks it's 'clear' :roll: that the silver is metalflake and the red is a candy topcoat, giving the 'Fireflake red'.
B+Bogus said:Came across this - no idea of the history or anything, but could this be Sapphire blue?
http://www.nortonownersclub.org/noc-chat/technical4-commando-forum/412738890/92764259/image-jpg
Dean said:That looks familiar... oh right it's mine. It's a 68 sn is 128372 so it's pretty early. I should see if I can get any information from the Norton owners club. I believe that they have the factory records.
Pretty sure it's factory finish. I have scratched a bit of the finish off and there doesn't seem to be any other colours underneath. Is the gel coat normally on the under side as well? You can see in the picture where the seat has worn off the blue to the silver flake under. Have never seen another bike finished the same but a few with the red and silver. Any help would be appreciated. Of course there is no way to know if it's original to this bike.
B+Bogus said:DogT said:I tried to take the black paint off my flake blue tank (Apr 69) and it turned sort of blue/silver. The blue came off mostly with the paint.
I've seen lots of tanks like this - the gelcoat is really thin on top of the flakes, so after some serious polishing or rubbing down the flakes break through and turn silver (they're just dyed aluminium). Looks ugly
The R type tank would have been silver flake (not a colour - just aluminium flakes) with candy red topcoat, so potentially salvageable.
I've never seen the sapphire blue, so can't comment on that one.
If it's a fibreglass tank, it's worth weighing the options of going to a whole lot of effort and expense to restore something which can't hold modern fuel - except avgas!, or buying a new steel tank and getting that painted.