vettefan67
New member
Hi all-
My mother had the misfortune of not pulling her car into the garage far enough and, well, you know what happens next. I looked at the bumper and there is a very heavy scar about [EDIT] .25" wide and 1" long, 1/16- deep. It bit into the plastic enough that there is a slight depression in the area . . . There are other, smaller scratches next to it that would require sanding and touch up.
What do you guys think? Is this possible? How would I touch up a large area like that, is it acceptable to paint on extremely thin coats?
She doesn't want to take it to a bodyshop and just wants it to look better. I would make sure that if I do it, the results are MUCH better than it currently is and as close to normal as possible but I realize this is much harder than most people think.
I'd love feedback here, what do you think? I can learn and practice on test panels but I know there are those of you out there with experience in this sort of thing.
Thanks!
Justin
My mother had the misfortune of not pulling her car into the garage far enough and, well, you know what happens next. I looked at the bumper and there is a very heavy scar about [EDIT] .25" wide and 1" long, 1/16- deep. It bit into the plastic enough that there is a slight depression in the area . . . There are other, smaller scratches next to it that would require sanding and touch up.
What do you guys think? Is this possible? How would I touch up a large area like that, is it acceptable to paint on extremely thin coats?
She doesn't want to take it to a bodyshop and just wants it to look better. I would make sure that if I do it, the results are MUCH better than it currently is and as close to normal as possible but I realize this is much harder than most people think.
I'd love feedback here, what do you think? I can learn and practice on test panels but I know there are those of you out there with experience in this sort of thing.
Thanks!
Justin