Adhesive for Motorcycle Plastic Fairing Crack

Joined
Jan 13, 2026
Messages
1
Location
9494 southwest freeway #850 houston, texas
Last week, I ran into a problem that other motorcycle owners might know well.

While parking my motorcycle in a tight spot, it tipped slightly and cracked the plastic fairing near the side panel. The crack is in a non-structural area and doesn’t affect how the bike rides, but it’s getting bigger due to vibration and wind.

Earlier i faced an equivalent matter on a scooter mirror housing, where a standard adhesive failed because of:

* Continuous vibration
* Heat from the engine and sunlight
* Exposure to rain and dust

This time, before making the same mistake, I want a proper expert opinion.

What I’m trying to fix (clear details):

* Part: Plastic fairing / side panel (ABS plastic)
* Damage: Hairline crack (not load-bearing)
* Conditions: High temperature, oscillations, occasional water exposure
* Goal: Temporary or semi-permanent repair until I replace the panel

My questions:

1. Does adhesive make sense for this type of motorcycle repair, or is plastic welding a better option?
2. If adhesive is suitable, what type should I look for (epoxy, polyurethane, plastic-specific adhesive, etc.)?
3. Are there any surface readiness steps (sanding, priming) that significantly improve durability?
4. Has anyone successfully used an adhesive in a similar motorcycle situation, and how long did it last?
5. Which Adhesive brand are you suggesting? I heard about GT Adhesives !!

I’m posting this in mechanical maintenance because I want real-life solutions and experience-based advice, rather than general product suggestions.

Any real-world experience, do’s and don’ts, or alternative repair methods would be greatly appreciated.

Thank you in advance for your valuable tips.
 
A mechanical repair like plastic welding is the way to go. There is so little surface area for an adhesive to hold a thin panel together that the vibrations tend to win out in the end.

The only way i can see adhesive working is if you adhered another panel across the crack from the back side. Then you greatly increase the surface area for the adhesive to bond to. At that point i would use a 2 part epoxy. Make sure you rough up the surface.
 
The only way i can see adhesive working is if you adhered another panel across the crack from the back side. Then you greatly increase the surface area for the adhesive to bond to. At that point i would use a 2 part epoxy. Make sure you rough up the surface.
This!!!
If the repair is temporary, drill a small hole at the end of the crack so it doesn't migrate. Then, either Gorilla Tape both sides or drill adjacent small holes on each side of the crack and stitch it together.
 
Drill a small hole at each end of the crack to stop it from spreading any further, use a dremel tool with a ball burr to grind a V in the crack.
Get some ABS sheet to use on the inside, cut to size (use a heat gun to mold it if necessary), rough the surface with 36 grit paper and use a special epoxy made for this project, you will need activator with it also, fill the crack and drilled holes only. After it cures sand the crack flush and put a piece of the ABS over it, overlap 1-2" and use the epoxy to affix the piece, clamp and let cure, finish as needed.

https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0CFYPMQC4?ref=emc_p_m_5_i_atc&th=1
https://ph.parker.com/us/en/product-list/fusor-132-133-plastic-repair-adhesive-super-fast
 
had a crack on a scooter plastic a few years ago. I sanded the back side of the crack and another inch or so on either side of the crack, stuck self adhesive drywall mesh tape on the back side over the crack then slathered on JB Plastiweld to completely cover the tape.

The repair held up just fine for the next few years until I sold the scoot.
 
Have a kubota compact tractor with a plastic hood and front engine cover that is brittle have been patching cracks some are 8" long with E 6000 adhesive and fine metal window screen and have excellent results that some are 6 years old. Ruff up the plastic underside with sand paper, wipe off the dust, heavy layer of adhesive push screen into it ,put more adhevsive over to cover screen. Let dry 24 hours if needed another coat another 24 hours good to go. E6000 found at walmart, hardware stores usually not far from chalking.
 
Back
Top Bottom