I bought the bike used and I cannot remember if it had a kickstand on it at 
the time.  Obviously, there was a kickstand there for a good period of 
time.  Regardless, I installed a kickstand on the rear triangle so nothing 
will be reinstalled on top of the now-rusty area.

On Monday, December 29, 2025 at 8:26:33 PM UTC-5 George Schick wrote:

> One thing that strikes me strange during this entire discussion, including 
> the OP's post, is *what caused it in the first place*?  Looks to me like 
> those rust marks on that part of both chain stays indicate that one of 
> those kick stands that clamp between the top and bottom of those stays was 
> used allowing corrosive elements (street salt) to creep between the bottom 
> clamps and harbor there, encouraging rust.  Any or all of the great 
> recommendations in this thread will surely check the rust problem, but 
> after they're applied re-installing that kickstand (if used and riding in 
> the same conditions) will be asking for a repeat of the same problem.
>
> On Monday, December 29, 2025 at 7:06:48 PM UTC-6 Jason Fuller wrote:
>
>> I would sand it down with some sandpaper personally, just to get the 
>> loose iron oxide off and a nice dependable surface for paint to adhere to, 
>> and then wipe clean with alcohol. Then use paint of your choosing really - 
>> I'd probably go with automotive touch-up paint with the handy brush to make 
>> it easy on myself. As long as it's a proper paint and not just primer 
>> (which is porous and will allow rust to continue) and adhered properly, you 
>> should be good 
>
>

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