Home Forums Bike Forum Invisiframe fitting is this acceptable?

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  • Invisiframe fitting is this acceptable?
  • bruneep
    Full Member

    Not my bike, this has been fitted to a new frame. Buyer was advised to give it a week to let it dry out

    opinions?

    teethgrinder
    Full Member

    How long ago was it done? I’d not be happy about that if I’d paid, or of i did it myself.

    Especially on the top of the top tube when you can see it on the bike.

    jimdubleyou
    Full Member

    I did mine myself, I wouldn’t have left bubbles like that on my bike.

    It’s probably already dry, so short of removing it with a hairdryer it’s probably going to stay like that?

    weeksy
    Full Member

    Seems fine to me…. But i’d buy it for the protection not for it being aesthetically perfect.

    uwe-r
    Free Member

    I’ve only ever done this to my own bike and that sort of finish is pretty hard to avoid. If this is the work of a bike shop its a bit messy. Not sure i would be happy if i paid good money for it but at the same time if i worked in a bike shop i would either refuse to do it or warn that the result is generally a messy looking bike.

    zilog6128
    Full Member

    Hard to say as crap photo, if those are tiny air bubbles not dust or other debris then yeah they may well disappear over time.

    bruneep
    Full Member

    Shop supplied and fitted, not seen in the flesh yet, maybe tonight. The shop keep batting it back saying it will dry out. I’m not convinced as it will be dry now as its been more than 24hrs since it was fitted.

    nickclift
    Free Member

    From what I can see, there are 5 air bubbles, 4 in a square shape, another lower down near the seat? I did my new Tyee a few weeks ago, second bike I’ve done now. I ended up with 1 air bubble that I found on a real close inspection. No, they don’t disappear after time. I managed to get rid of my bubble my getting a pin and sliding into the edge of the bubble and giving a firm rub with a cloth towards the hole. No evidence of the hole and bubble gone!
    For what its worth, if I’d paid to have that done professionally, I wouldn’t be too chuffed.

    zilog6128
    Full Member

    I’m not convinced as it will be dry now as its been more than 24hrs since it was fitted.

    if they’re air bubbles then they probably will disappear over time as the vinyl is porous, but it’ll be days/weeks not 24hrs. If it’s actual water/liquid in there… not sure… but you really shouldn’t get bubbles like that with wet application anyway.

    DickBarton
    Full Member

    Unsure what comes in the install pack these days but back in 2015 it came with a wee squeegee type thing that once the tape was installed, you dragged along it to remove the excess water but also move any air bubbles to the edges and then remove them. Installation can be straight-forward if you have a lot of time and patience, I’d guess a bike shop is short on both so it isn’t such a time-consuming job, so it might not be as carefully installed and then ‘squeegee’d’…

    However, I’ve seen quite a few bikes invisiframed since then done by individuals and by shops and some of the finishes do appear to be hit or miss in terms of amount of air bubbles that are left. The ones that look like there is no tape over the bike seem to be the ones done by individuals with plenty time and patience or by shops that seem to do a lot of them.

    If I’d paid someone to do it I’d be unhappy but probably not unhappy enough to look to get it redone. If it was myself, I’d be annoyed that I didn’t get it sorted and may try and fix it.

    hamishthecat
    Free Member

    I’m with Weeksy on this. I’d also possibly get a hair drier and pin but would probably just ride it.

    andybrad
    Full Member

    brand new bike? if so then not acceptable.

    ridden bike. your lucky its that good

    matt_outandabout
    Full Member

    weeksy +1

    The only thing I might be narked about is how much money I had spent on said ‘professional’ job…

    honourablegeorge
    Full Member

    I’d refuse to pay for that, tbh. Doing a crap job of it yourself is free, you’re paying for it to be done right.

    Pauly
    Full Member

    I’d not be happy with that if it’s on a new bike. It’s hardly rocket science putting it on, just takes patience & good prep.

    bruneep
    Full Member

    Yup its a brand new bike. He paid £130 I’m guessing that includes the kit

    nealglover
    Free Member

    As @honourablegeorge said above, I can do a crap job myself for free so wouldn’t be happy paying to get it done badly.

    If shops offer it as a service, they should give it the time it needs to do it properly.

    Some of the quotes I got to have it done were £150 + the kit …. so I did it myself and it looks fairly crap.
    But it’s protecting the frame just the same as it would for the £150 installation cost, and that is really what I wanted it for.

    PrinceJohn
    Full Member

    I’d be complaining – as far as vinyl goes invisiframe is relatively easy to install.

    escrs
    Free Member

    Im guessing £130 would just be for the fitting (i was quoted £100 last time for fitting) the kit is around £80 last time i bought one and fitted it myself

    As already said it takes time and patience to do it right, most shops say it takes a good few hours as to do it properly as you need to strip the bike down

    Joe
    Full Member

    If the bike has a matt finish to start with, you’ll often see the above as the finish itself won’t be that smooth.

    ta11pau1
    Full Member

    Not good enough, matt or gloss finish there should not be that many huge air bubbles.

    This is my own, done ages ago and my first attempt – I was disappointed I had 2 air bubbles on the entire frame….



    funkmasterp
    Full Member

    Meh! Looks fine to me. It’s a mountain bike. It’s not going to stay pretty for very long

    honourablegeorge
    Full Member

    Staying pretty is the sole reason behind invisiframe. If it fails on that, it’s money wasted.

    nealglover
    Free Member

    Meh! Looks fine to me. It’s a mountain bike. It’s not going to stay pretty for very long

    TBF it doesn’t really sound like you are in Invisiframe’s target market …..

    timbog160
    Free Member

    If I was that shop I’d have asked Invisiframe to send me a replacement for that part and then refit. £130 is a lot to pay for a poor quality job.

    timbog160
    Free Member

    Also I wouldn’t be able to live with it like that so if the shop didn’t offer to do it for free I’d have to replace that part myself. Damage after a bit of use is one thing but when it’s new it’s new!

    chakaping
    Full Member

    TBF it doesn’t really sound like you are in Invisiframe’s target market …..

    Hahaha.

    I might tolerate a couple of little bubbles on a less-conspicuous part of the frame, but on the top tube is a bit too visible.

    funkmasterp
    Full Member

    TBF it doesn’t really sound like you are in Invisiframe’s target market …..

    Fair comment but to be fair it doesn’t look that bad. Was it £130 for the install or kit and install. If the former I wouldn’t be happy, the latter then I wouldn’t complain. Then again I just protect the most vulnerable bits for about £30 Max.

    As per weeksy, is your friend looking fir protection or preserving the aesthetic?

    branes
    Free Member

    My rule of thumb is that if I could do it better than a ‘pro’ then it isn’t good enough.

    I could do (and have done) better than that. Although it did takes ages of course.

    bruneep
    Full Member

    Been sent a couple more pics not using the potato cam. Its really poor

    eddie
    Free Member

    I did my own and it looks better than that, when I took it to the mechanic to build the bike up he pissed himself laughing at the poor quality job I’d done, so I wouldn’t be paying for that

    funkmasterp
    Full Member

    Well that looks much worse than the top photo. Reckon I could do a better job and I’m a cack handed fool.

    DickBarton
    Full Member

    That looks worse than what I’d do…

    H1ghland3r
    Free Member

    That’s absolutely bloody shocking, I wouldn’t be paying for that. Had my Occam done by the shop when new and it took me a few seconds of looking to see the Invisiframe at all, it was essentially completely invisible and still is a year later.

    #Edit: Quite aside from it looking terrible, in that state the dirt will get under it where it’s peeling at the edges and it’ll start peeling off in just a matter of weeks.

    stumpy01
    Full Member

    Ah, those pics look much worse.
    I was originally going to say it didn’t look too bad, but it looks awful in those pics.
    I wouldn’t be paying for that. Even the edges look crap.

    ta11pau1
    Full Member

    Holy ******.

    I would not be handing over a penny for that. The clue is in the name…. INVISIframe. Not HUGEGREATBIGBUBBLESVISIBLEFROMSPACEframe.

    More bubbles than a mint aero!!! Did they just throw it at the frame and see what stuck?

    trail_rat
    Free Member

    Well now I know who not to use locally for this job ….

    Did the work experiances apprentice do it?

    escrs
    Free Member

    Id be sending those pics to Invisiframe and asking if the shop is an approved installer!!

    jake123
    Free Member

    That’s a tragic job.
    I did my own first time, took about 4 hours. Was nowhere near that bad with just a few bits of dust and odd tiny bubble.

    I’d be straight back to them

    zilog6128
    Full Member

    Yeah that’s truly awful 😂

Viewing 40 posts - 1 through 40 (of 205 total)

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