Are there any paint/body repair experts out there? With 12,154 members of this forum there have to be a few.
It is Friday evening and I have just picked up my black 2003 Dodge hemi from the body shop. I had a minor dent (over $500) repaired at the top of a door. The repair was made and base coat was applied in the area of the repair and then the WHOLE door was clearcoated. The door handle, rearview mirror, all of the moldings and all emblems were removed to insure a quality, lasting repair. SURE!
This is a shop that I have gone to for thirty years. Yes, I have had to go back on several occasions to have things that were not quite right fixed. But still it is one of the best in town.
Two problems. The first -- the repair shows because the painter or perhaps the tech that removed the dent did not “feather� the repair correctly. Can this problem be corrected without stripping all the moldings, etc. off and reapplying clearcoat to the entire door? Can the repair/repainting just be done in the area of the original repair? I don’t want a door with too many layers of paint on it.
The second problem. The entire truck is covered with clearcoat overspray – windshield, hood, roof, maybe more. I think that they were careless and did not mask correctly or else it was too close to another job. The work was done in a paint booth. I’m sure that the clearcoat was PPG urethane. The shop will have to get it off. Will clay remove this overspray? I know that is what it was designed for, but I’m just not sure. How else might the folks at the shop attempt to remove the overspray? What should I insist that they not do?
I know this is going to be on my mind all weekend. I would very much appreciate any suggestions you might have before I talk to the shop manager at 7:00 a.m. on Monday.
Tom

It is Friday evening and I have just picked up my black 2003 Dodge hemi from the body shop. I had a minor dent (over $500) repaired at the top of a door. The repair was made and base coat was applied in the area of the repair and then the WHOLE door was clearcoated. The door handle, rearview mirror, all of the moldings and all emblems were removed to insure a quality, lasting repair. SURE!
This is a shop that I have gone to for thirty years. Yes, I have had to go back on several occasions to have things that were not quite right fixed. But still it is one of the best in town.
Two problems. The first -- the repair shows because the painter or perhaps the tech that removed the dent did not “feather� the repair correctly. Can this problem be corrected without stripping all the moldings, etc. off and reapplying clearcoat to the entire door? Can the repair/repainting just be done in the area of the original repair? I don’t want a door with too many layers of paint on it.
The second problem. The entire truck is covered with clearcoat overspray – windshield, hood, roof, maybe more. I think that they were careless and did not mask correctly or else it was too close to another job. The work was done in a paint booth. I’m sure that the clearcoat was PPG urethane. The shop will have to get it off. Will clay remove this overspray? I know that is what it was designed for, but I’m just not sure. How else might the folks at the shop attempt to remove the overspray? What should I insist that they not do?
I know this is going to be on my mind all weekend. I would very much appreciate any suggestions you might have before I talk to the shop manager at 7:00 a.m. on Monday.
Tom
