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Its just out of fashion

you are a bullshit artist if you think it did not look cool when you first saw it

New fashion is hella flush bro

if you want some cheap decals

Sand your car back to the metal put salt and beer on it

Cheap and in fashion :D

  • 2 months later...

How much did they want for the installation?

One is saying $70 an hour and about 4 hours but knowing them they will prolong it to 5 hours or some shit

The other is saying $90 an hour and 3 - 4 hours but depending on what type of vinyl it is depends on how long it will take.

Why don't you try to design your own, make a stencil and use plasti-dip and spray it on. If you don't like it just peel it off.

Plasti dip is terrible..... it will come to washing my car and the sponge would just wash the plasti dip off with it

Plasti dip is terrible..... it will come to washing my car and the sponge would just wash the plasti dip off with it

Since when!! I know a few people that have done their bonnets, rims and badges. No issues like what your saying. And they are all over a year old. I think it's a bit of a myth.

Since when!! I know a few people that have done their bonnets, rims and badges. No issues like what your saying. And they are all over a year old. I think it's a bit of a myth.

Agree. My brother has got bits and pieces of it on his car and not an issue yet. It is surprisingly really good and easy for that DIY stuff.

Plasti dip is terrible..... it will come to washing my car and the sponge would just wash the plasti dip off with it

For F**k sake someone delete this thread. Plasti dip WILL NOT wash off with a sponge unless your washing your car with sand paper or some shit.

f**k me!

Plasti dipped rims before, you knock em a little bit with the lug nut and the whole thing starts to shit itself and peel off, i.e you get brake dust all over it it does not wash off without bits coming off

You did it wrong lol. How many coats did you do? Also... because plasti-dip IS durable.. you can scrub them with a sponge and soapy water lol

I dipped my rims a year ago, a few weeks ago, it took me 2-3hrs to take the dip off on one wheel....

You did it wrong lol. How many coats did you do? Also... because plasti-dip IS durable.. you can scrub them with a sponge and soapy water lol

I dipped my rims a year ago, a few weeks ago, it took me 2-3hrs to take the dip off on one wheel....

this!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

You did it wrong lol. How many coats did you do? Also... because plasti-dip IS durable.. you can scrub them with a sponge and soapy water lol

I dipped my rims a year ago, a few weeks ago, it took me 2-3hrs to take the dip off on one wheel....

3 - 4 coats, first 50% coverage, 2nd fill, 3rd full coverage, 4th extra

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  • Latest Posts

    • Did you panel beat the dents or have you tried to repair this only using filler?  Is your sanding block soft/flexible and is following the shape of the panel rather then just knocking down the high points? 
    • I haven't knocked them down yet. I think I made the repair more complex than it should have been. I had rock chips combined with waviness and dents and I tackled it all in one because it was near each other and just end up wasting a bunch of bog lol. I'll knock down those areas and see how I go. And yep what you are saying at the end is correct. I think I might be sanding the top of a steep hill then my sanding block falls into the dent and gets rid of the guidecoat if that makes sense. Though shouldnt unless I'm covering too big of an area with not a long enough block. I'll try something new and provide some updates. Getting there though! Thanks as always.  
    • Yeah makes sense, hard to comment on your situation without seeing what your doing. I was talking generally before, I would not be looking to randomly create low spots with a hammer to then have to fill them.  It's hard without seeing what your doing, it sounds like you are using the guide coat to identify low spots, as you're saying the panel is still wavy. I don't see how you're not ending up with patches of guide coat remaining in a wavy panel? Once the high spots are knocked down to the correct level, surely to have a wavy panel you need low spots. And those low spots would have guide coat still in them?
    • So I'll put filler past the repair area a bit to make sure I don't miss anything. Then I'll block it until it's almost level, put the guidecoat, then keep blocking until it's gone. Then it's still wavy.  In regards to hitting the panel, I saw this video might give more context - Skip to 0:47 he knocks it down. But yeah I'm sanding until the guidecoat is gone then checking because otherwise my filler is still well above the bodyline. Unless what you're saying is I should put guidecoat around it early, surrounding the filler then stip once it's gone?
    • I refreshed the OEM injectors with the kit and connected it up. It now ideals okay even with the IACV removed. Driving still has the same cutoff issue like the 550cc injectors so the issue is somewhere else. I bought FPG's Fuel Pump Hanger. I will be installing it next, but it is not as straightforward as I thought it was with my limited wiring knowledge and no instruction on the specific model I purchased (FPG-089). I also got the incorrect billet clamp as I could not find info on the OEM sizing.
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