Envious Eric
New member
does it matter if its a kandy color job or not on how hard the clear is? I mean, is it like the hard cerami-clear on ALL Mercedes, or can it be either? Is it a process or what...
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toyotaguy said:does it matter if its a kandy color job or not on how hard the clear is? I mean, is it like the hard cerami-clear on ALL Mercedes, or can it be either? Is it a process or what...
Darkstar752 said:There's almost always going to be a clear coat over it. The clear hardness will vary since it is a custom paint job, based on the shop, but I think the clear will be on the harder side since it's a metallic.
MuttGrunt said:^ Well let me help you with my little knowledge of auto paint.
"Candy-coated paint" is actually just a tinted clear-coat. By adding color to the clear-coat, it will make an additional affect over a metallic paint job. When you combine this tinted clear with large metallic flakes underneath, the paint really pops a lot while giving a different look than normal. Red, blue, yellow, purple, etc pigments can all be used to give various affects.
How hard the clear is will be determined by what they used - not the tint/color/"kandy"
The PPG Cerami-clears that have been popular with MB, BMW, Lamborghini, Ferrari, etc are extremely hard and are made to be such. You won't find that same clear in an aftermarket job however- it's not an application used in shops, but is rather part of their production-focused product groupings made for bigger manufacturers. One such problem is that they apparently need to bake the cerami-clears at 400 degrees (F)... such a thing would cause major problems for interiors, plastic trim, rubber trim, gasoline/fuel/liquids still in the car, etc as you can imagine
MuttGrunt said:^ Well let me help you with my little knowledge of auto paint.
"Candy-coated paint" is actually just a tinted clear-coat. By adding color to the clear-coat, it will make an additional affect over a metallic paint job. When you combine this tinted clear with large metallic flakes underneath, the paint really pops a lot while giving a different look than normal. Red, blue, yellow, purple, etc pigments can all be used to give various affects.
How hard the clear is will be determined by what they used - not the tint/color/"kandy"
The PPG Cerami-clears that have been popular with MB, BMW, Lamborghini, Ferrari, etc are extremely hard and are made to be such. You won't find that same clear in an aftermarket job however- it's not an application used in shops, but is rather part of their production-focused product groupings made for bigger manufacturers. One such problem is that they apparently need to bake the cerami-clears at 400 degrees (F)... such a thing would cause major problems for interiors, plastic trim, rubber trim, gasoline/fuel/liquids still in the car, etc as you can imagine
MuttGrunt said:^ Well let me help you with my little knowledge of auto paint.
"Candy-coated paint" is actually just a tinted clear-coat. By adding color to the clear-coat, it will make an additional affect over a metallic paint job. When you combine this tinted clear with large metallic flakes underneath, the paint really pops a lot while giving a different look than normal. Red, blue, yellow, purple, etc pigments can all be used to give various affects.
How hard the clear is will be determined by what they used - not the tint/color/"kandy"
The PPG Cerami-clears that have been popular with MB, BMW, Lamborghini, Ferrari, etc are extremely hard and are made to be such. You won't find that same clear in an aftermarket job however- it's not an application used in shops, but is rather part of their production-focused product groupings made for bigger manufacturers. One such problem is that they apparently need to bake the cerami-clears at 400 degrees (F)... such a thing would cause major problems for interiors, plastic trim, rubber trim, gasoline/fuel/liquids still in the car, etc as you can imagine