notsoslimshady
New member
I bought some wheels a while back which had a rough life (160k miles, caked on brake dust, etc). Then I drove them for 2 more years (20k more miles). Now it was time to fix them up.
The first bad one:
Little bit of body filler, lots of sanding. For the lip I used a plastic fork handle wrapped in sand paper for a flat surface
After paint
Zoom in. The scratch was on the diagonal left spoke. Not perfect, but neither is my car
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Wheel 2:
Curb rash is on the upper left lip of the wheel
Many applications of body filler and then sanding. I slowly built the lip back up. I again used the handle of a plastic fork wrapped in sand paper.
After paint. Again, not perfect, but much better.
All four of them after paint (Sorry, camera washed out the color. They're a medium silver):
Products Used
- Griot's Garage Wheel Restoration Kit
There wasn't enough paint or primer for my tastes. I wound up buying an extra can of Duplicolor paint and a can of clear coat. I liked both Duplicolor products better (and its cheaper)! It turns out Griot's garage discontinued my kit and I couldn't buy extra paint anyway :doh
-Sand Paper
-Wire brush to remove paint.
Bad idea, it gouged out the paint a little more than I thought. I block sanded afterwords, but still couldn't get all the scratchies out. Live and learn
-Lots of time. It took almost two weeks of work to repair and repaint these wheels. Completely worth it
Wheels are going to be rebalanced (statically) and I'll mount them tomorrow hopefully.
The first bad one:


Little bit of body filler, lots of sanding. For the lip I used a plastic fork handle wrapped in sand paper for a flat surface

After paint

Zoom in. The scratch was on the diagonal left spoke. Not perfect, but neither is my car

---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Wheel 2:

Curb rash is on the upper left lip of the wheel

Many applications of body filler and then sanding. I slowly built the lip back up. I again used the handle of a plastic fork wrapped in sand paper.

After paint. Again, not perfect, but much better.

All four of them after paint (Sorry, camera washed out the color. They're a medium silver):




Products Used
- Griot's Garage Wheel Restoration Kit
There wasn't enough paint or primer for my tastes. I wound up buying an extra can of Duplicolor paint and a can of clear coat. I liked both Duplicolor products better (and its cheaper)! It turns out Griot's garage discontinued my kit and I couldn't buy extra paint anyway :doh
-Sand Paper
-Wire brush to remove paint.
Bad idea, it gouged out the paint a little more than I thought. I block sanded afterwords, but still couldn't get all the scratchies out. Live and learn
-Lots of time. It took almost two weeks of work to repair and repaint these wheels. Completely worth it
Wheels are going to be rebalanced (statically) and I'll mount them tomorrow hopefully.