Repaint or touch up
#1
Repaint or touch up
Hey guys I’ve got an 04 red coupe. It’s got some spots on the hood where it needs touching up. Around the body also and then on the side mirrors the clear coat is gone in some spots and above the windows too on that small strip of the roof. My question is should I just touch up the spots on the body and then have the side mirrors completely repainted or just repaint the whole car. And if I do repaint the whole car who has a good paint job for not too much? Mako? Idk thanks
#3
I've been having a similar dilemma as every body panel on my car either needs paintwork or bodywork.
What I may eventually do is apply Raail Airwrap 2k Gloss using a borrowed compressor and harbor freight HLVP gun. It's similar to plasti-dip but with better self-levelling and a gloss hard topcoat. You can also get some pretty depth/color shifting effects using pearls and flakes although I haven't looked into this too much.
Here's what the coating looks like:
and how well it holds up after the hard topcoat:
Close enough to paintwork for me, especially since the materials cost for the G is less than $400. It's not permanent, but should last longer than plastidip which is advertised as 3+ years.
On your car I would sand back the failing clear coat, spray on rattle can clear in the failed areas to prevent further failure under the liquid wrap, and then give this process a shot. I'd love to hear others' experiences with this kind of thing as well as I'm planning on doing this sometime in October. If it happens I'll post a DIY.
What I may eventually do is apply Raail Airwrap 2k Gloss using a borrowed compressor and harbor freight HLVP gun. It's similar to plasti-dip but with better self-levelling and a gloss hard topcoat. You can also get some pretty depth/color shifting effects using pearls and flakes although I haven't looked into this too much.
Here's what the coating looks like:
Close enough to paintwork for me, especially since the materials cost for the G is less than $400. It's not permanent, but should last longer than plastidip which is advertised as 3+ years.
On your car I would sand back the failing clear coat, spray on rattle can clear in the failed areas to prevent further failure under the liquid wrap, and then give this process a shot. I'd love to hear others' experiences with this kind of thing as well as I'm planning on doing this sometime in October. If it happens I'll post a DIY.
Last edited by cswlightning; 07-24-2018 at 03:15 PM.
#5
It's the sanding which takes all the time with the paint job, the actual process seems similar. It seems like less work to just re-dip the car every 5 years compared to sanding every inch of the car to prep for paint. For me, the dip removal will give me the chance to see how my rust repairs are holding up after a couple years.
#6
that plastic dip looking paint doesnt look that bad actually
but im pretty sure the orange peel would be bad
it will actually take you longer to mask up the car than painting
if your painting a regular basic stock color..
ill paint a car for $150 if its all masked up ready to go in the spray booth just give me the materials
but im pretty sure the orange peel would be bad
it will actually take you longer to mask up the car than painting
if your painting a regular basic stock color..
ill paint a car for $150 if its all masked up ready to go in the spray booth just give me the materials
#7
that plastic dip looking paint doesnt look that bad actually
but im pretty sure the orange peel would be bad
it will actually take you longer to mask up the car than painting
if your painting a regular basic stock color..
ill paint a car for $150 if its all masked up ready to go in the spray booth just give me the materials
but im pretty sure the orange peel would be bad
it will actually take you longer to mask up the car than painting
if your painting a regular basic stock color..
ill paint a car for $150 if its all masked up ready to go in the spray booth just give me the materials
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#8
If you're using any kind of self-leveling compound on a car I strongly recommend you buy a vibrating motor between 50-75 lbs force and bolt it to the frame and run it for like 15-30 seconds after application. It causes the leveling compound to instantly flatten and gives a really good finish, anything more than a 75# of vibration causes wierd "ripples" to happen in places so smaller is better, a 25# is a little small but can still work.
If you don't have access to a vibrator motor but have access to a smaller concrete stinger you can use it if you make a clamp to secure it to the frame.
If you don't have access to a vibrator motor but have access to a smaller concrete stinger you can use it if you make a clamp to secure it to the frame.
#9
#12
All depends on what you really want to do it
Leave it straight as a ruler
Just all even covered and shiny
And how much money you want to spend on material
Theres $60 clear coats -finish one
And theres $300 clear coats spi(bradm??) Used it on hes too
And basecoats hace different prices