Painted my 400F engine with duplicolor engine paint, good color match until 2000 miles later, now it looks like a dog peed on it,especially the valve cover, as well as being scratched anywhere that I looked at it wrong. Latest rebuild (350 twin)is powdercoated for sure.
Yeah, I'm really worried about this. But my build is hitting the year mark, and I'm getting to the point where I just need to start wrapping things up.
I was going to try to find some local auto paint place to paint my engine... but I couldn't find anyone who had any real level of experience doing air cooled motorcycle engines. The place that powder coated my frame messed up my brake calipers, so I didn't want to chance my cylinder and head to some powder coater (again, hard to find anyone with experience on air cooled motorcycle engines).
Seems like most of the old-timers here just go with the Duplicolor engine paint, so I figured I'd do the same and save $400 that I would have spent on a professional to potentially mess-up my engine.
I think I read every post in the forums on engine painting, it seems about 50% say they're happy with using Duplicolor/VHT and the other 50% have had problems like you describe. The former usually blame the latter's problems on prep, but I've read many posts where people describe how they went through all the correct prep steps and still had problems. So, I know I'm taking a chance here.
That said I did prep the heck out of my engine (I lost count of how many times I pressure washed the cases)... paint stripper, home grade soda blaster (but under powered), aircraft stripper, and went through a bunch of scotch pads, hit the corners and hard to reach areas with small rotary metal brush bits, sprayed the jugs and head with brake cleaner, and wiped all the parts down with lacquer thinner before painting.
The only part I wasn't able to get as clean as I wanted were the jugs. I just couldn't get a good mechanical abrasive all the way in between the fins. I did the best I could, but I suspect this will be the one weak spot of my paint job.
I'll try to remember to report back in a year on how well it's held up.