First, should I do this with it installed? Mainly worried about the bumper, just tweaking it a little bit in and out of the car I see where I caused the existing paint to crack. Would I be better off installing it and finishing it in place, or can I be careful enough and not tweak it and crack the new paint?
I can do the header panel off the car easy, and it doesn't flex, and easy to install without banging it up.
I have a few rock dings in the bumper and in the header panel. What should I use to fill them? I sanded any of the larger ones, and I guess I can feather each one out, but then I am into the plastic and then it needs more work.
On the bumper, so far I have hit the entire thing with 320 grit. Hitting the entire thing wet with some a little soap. Once overall done, focused on the damage, which is worse that I thought it was at first glance with it dirty and in the junk yard. I then hit the larger patches of down to plastic with 400 grit, and also the larger spots I took it down to plastic, and one pass up and down, and one pass side to side over the entire thing.
I am not sure if I should use a filler type primer, or an etching type primer, or adhesion promoter and primer, or...something else.
I also am contemplating from the excellent other thread on rattle can bumper cover paint, the automotivetouchup.com 12 ounce Silver Frost at 20 bucks a can (probably need 3?), or getting 6 8 ounce cans of Duplicolor for 32 bucks, also knowing I can get them locally for 8 bucks a can for 8 ounces. Quality versus quantity.
I am practicing on a header panel for my father, but it isn't going on a car, it is getting LEDs and going on the side of a shed for display purposes. It came out okay, and I learned a few tricky things that didn't come out good so I know to focus on it more on my header panel.
didn't remove the pin striping, and a rock chip I didn't feather out, plus it was gouged into the plastic pretty deep.
worst of the damage. I am not going for show quality here, but I don't want it looking like crap ir like a second grader school project:
stone chips, about 10 of them
I can do the header panel off the car easy, and it doesn't flex, and easy to install without banging it up.
I have a few rock dings in the bumper and in the header panel. What should I use to fill them? I sanded any of the larger ones, and I guess I can feather each one out, but then I am into the plastic and then it needs more work.
On the bumper, so far I have hit the entire thing with 320 grit. Hitting the entire thing wet with some a little soap. Once overall done, focused on the damage, which is worse that I thought it was at first glance with it dirty and in the junk yard. I then hit the larger patches of down to plastic with 400 grit, and also the larger spots I took it down to plastic, and one pass up and down, and one pass side to side over the entire thing.
I am not sure if I should use a filler type primer, or an etching type primer, or adhesion promoter and primer, or...something else.
I also am contemplating from the excellent other thread on rattle can bumper cover paint, the automotivetouchup.com 12 ounce Silver Frost at 20 bucks a can (probably need 3?), or getting 6 8 ounce cans of Duplicolor for 32 bucks, also knowing I can get them locally for 8 bucks a can for 8 ounces. Quality versus quantity.
I am practicing on a header panel for my father, but it isn't going on a car, it is getting LEDs and going on the side of a shed for display purposes. It came out okay, and I learned a few tricky things that didn't come out good so I know to focus on it more on my header panel.
didn't remove the pin striping, and a rock chip I didn't feather out, plus it was gouged into the plastic pretty deep.
worst of the damage. I am not going for show quality here, but I don't want it looking like crap ir like a second grader school project:
stone chips, about 10 of them