On one of the best days at work ever, a French guy brought in one of Trey Canard's old CR125s to ship home to him in France. He was a mechanic for Trey, and Trey gave him the bike as a gift. We arranged shipping for the bike, but it took a few days so we got to talk to the guy a lot. One of the things I really like about the bike was the grip tape on the frame. I've tried skateboard deck tape, but I don't think it works as well as the stuff he was using. I was in Home Depot today, and I found this stuff:
It is made by 3M and was $12.97 for a 15 foot roll. You can find it in the paint section by all the tapes. I have done Flipper and my 04 250, and I still have a ton left. It is very tough and very sticky.
Anyway, before the Frenchman left to go home, he walked us through how to apply the tape. I know most of you can probably get tape on your frame, but this made it easier for me so I thought I would pass it along. The first thing he said to do was run a piece down the frame from the joint to the first major turn, like this:
Cut the tape off across the frame and then round the edge to the frame contour:
Apply the tape to the frame, and then switch to painters tape. Place the tape close to the edge of the piece on your frame and run it as far down as you can before the frame turns again. Use your nail to mark where you should cut the tape.
Trim the edges carefully with a razor blade and it should look like this:
Transfer that on to the top of the frame tape and cut with scissors:
Voila (is that even a French word?)!
Repeat until you've covered everything. I like the frame tape because it protects your paint and can also cover up already rubbed off paint like on a flip you're trying to get top dollar for.
Thanks French Guy!