FRAME POLISHING
Alot of people either consider polishing their frames and swingarms or consider paying someone to do it.  Well, if you have a semi-clean, dry place to work on your bike, have some mechanical ability, and between 50 and 100 hours to spend, You CAN polish you own bike!  I did!
This is my before picture.  In this pic you can see that my swingarm and foot controls are already polished.  I did that during the '99/00 winter.
First off, do not let anyone fool you, this is not a quick, easy job!  I have about 140 hours into the frame, swingarm and foot controls.  These are estimates, but I figure 100 hours on the frame, 30 on the swingarm and 10 on the foot controls.  Remember this was the first time doing this.  I learned a ton and could probably do this again in about 80 hours total.  I did the foot controls the first.  I ground off the seams and re-shaped the brake lever pad.  Next was the swingarm. This was a big learning experience for me.  I also got scared.  The swingarm on the '98/99 ZX-9R is constructed from extruded aluminum.  This process leaves grooves on the sides of the swingarm.  These require more work to get the swingarm smooth.  Smooth = Beautiful!!  I also learned, the hard way, about buff burns.  This happens when you are using a buffing wheel with buffing compound and over heat an area by staying in one spot for too long.  This requires you to go back to sandpaper to sand out the burn mark.   Then this past winter I did the frame.  I have done alot of research and talked to alot of people.  I am not trying to brag, but I think my research has paid off.
Here is the after picture.  Due to overcast skies, this picture isn't as good as I would like, but I will take another picture on a sunny day.  You have probably also noticed the lack of hanger bracket for the muffler.  I didn't like the one included with the exhaust system, so I made my own.  Pictures with that later.
Click here for more pictures and instruction on how I polished my frame.
1