I'd just use model paint. You can mix the little paint jars and get a
custom color that matches. If you are not confident to do that, get an
art student/person/friend to help. Model paint usually keeps fairly
well. I just ride the beans out of my bikes and put some past wax on
but I have to be totally honest I haven't done much to my various
bikes except spray one inside with T-9. Mostly I just ride the beans
out of them. I have bikes from the 80's with original paint one of
which I rode for two winters with nothing but wax over the paint dings
and viola no rust. Imagine that, all that fuss and no problemo! I had
one frame powdercoated and after 28 years of original paint and
neglect I could have just left it alone and rode it for 28 more and
still the frame would be rideable. If its just looks then touch it up
and have it re-painted every 10 years but rust really isn't an issue
if you store your bike inside and ride with fenders. I'd just plug the
common pathways to getting water in the bottom bracket, use fenders,
T-9 inside and wax out side coupled with touch up once in a while and
"forget about it", capish!

On Aug 28, 7:37 am, stevew <st...@stevewimberg.com> wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> I have an orange Rambouillet with a few nicks and scrapes.  Some have
> been touched up with nail polish by the previous owner, and some are
> newer, showing the bare steel.  I would like to redo the existing
> touch up spots, and touch up the new nicks.
>
> My concern is not so much aesthetic, but rust prevention.
>
> I found a good step by step on how to touch up bicycle paint on the
> Waterford site:http://waterfordbikes.com/now/home.php?newstype=touchuppaint
>
> And, some orange bike touch paint at Ben's 
> Cycles:http://www.benscycle.net/index.php?main_page=product_info&cPath=612_6...
>
> Here are my questions:
>
> 1.  What do people normally use to touch up paint?  I have seen many
> different examples online, but am curious what this group thinks.
>
> 2.  If I use nail polish remover to remove the existing nail polish on
> my bike, do I need to worry about the nail polish remover coming into
> contact with the original finish?
>
> 3.  A small bottle of Testors paint seems like a decent way to go,
> although color match may be a problem.  If I use Testor's, I want
> enamel paint, right?  I would rather not get into spraying, which
> eliminates the Competition Orange, I think.
>
> Any other wisdom is certainly welcome.
>
> Thanks,
> Steve
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