Jump to content
SAU Community

Pics From Recent Paint Job! <56k Users Beware>


Recommended Posts

  • Replies 44
  • Created
  • Last Reply

Top Posters In This Topic

Not 100% Joel. My mate was a spray painter for about 15 years so I'll ask him next time I see him, but I think it'd be either bad prep work, spraying it on too dry (not enough paint), or done in a too humid room...

I fell for you cause it may be off the road for a while for it to get fixed :)

Please name the paintshop that did this work, and delete all personal comments from your post. That way it's not defamation, and SAU cannot get in trouble.

That's some top notch work!

Will do Merli.

I am waiting for the thread title to be changed to remove the word Bodgy.

I was just adjusting the doors as they were hanging out too much. Now they are nice and flush. I've also noticed a big arsed run under the left hand door handle. :rant: It goes for around 5cm's.

The more I look the more I find when will it end.. :rofl:

I really want to find out how orange peel is created so I sound like I know what I am talking about. Those pillars were apparently sprayed on too dry.

That would have to be the very worse paint job I've ever seen.

I would go straight to the paint shop and complain, then I would go to the TWO BEST paint shop that you know of, get them to quote to repair the fcuked up paint.

Take them as ammo to the paint shop who did the sub-standard job and they don't fix it up properly (with you checking the work everyday) you should then take the quotes to a law firm who deal strickly with this type of thing.

Let the panel shop know that they can't get away with it.

BASS OUT

PM me for the name of a law firm who do this stuff if required.

the paint has been applied to dry in most areas,too much thinners could have been put in the paint,it actually looks like acrylic paint.Most of it could be rectified by blocking down and buffing it up and the runs could be shaved off with a razorblade.The tape off lines cant be repaired without re painting.Paint with Orange peel can also be blocked down and buffed to a uniform finish.There are diffrent types of orange peel,yours is the dry type.Factory vehicles have a nice even peel running through them which is what you want to replicate when doing a repair.To get a true dead glassy look the car needs to be flow coated,check my post on vehicles repair for this process,or to get a flat smooth look rub down with 1200 and buff back but this looks a little too "false" for my liking.Too large air cap and nozzle set will cause exccesive coarse peel on 2K products due to the material hasnt had much air added to it and in no way can atomize correctly.Large caps and nozzles are for acrylic and hi fills....oh and a crap operator will also get excessive orange peel...sorry to crap on

this is pathetic but i have seen worse

it is for this reason that the panel shop industry is going dying

these days its all about quick turnover time and who can do the job the quickest and the cheapest

it honestly makes me sick to see how careless some workshops are after being brought up around my uncles who are perfectionists and took absoloutly no shortcuts and did everyjob as if it were their own car i just cannot believe thigs like this actually happen regularly.

I'm waiting for the mods to edit the thread title.

Thanx ylwgtr2. :)

To me it looks like there is two different types of orange peel.

The really crappy looking one is on the front pillars, the front bumper is bad also.

The doors and guards now have a strange orange peel look that wasn't there before. Basically it doesn't have that mirror look instead wobbly :D

The roof, bonnet and boot is like mirror. No waves nothing, strange it is on the top surfaces where it is nice. :)

Wow, the runs down the side there are particularly nasty, mind you I find anything less than a paintjob done by 10 robots in the original factory annoying, but all the same, that is dodgy. Don't envy your situation, I'd feel violated, I mean I think my car would feel 'dirty' to me.

Not good, hope it works out for ya.

How much did they rob you for that work?

Print out this thread and take it down there and show them what a bunch of other car enthusiasts think of the work.

Tell them that if they dont repair it immediately and make the entire car look like it came out of the factory you will release the name of their company onto this forum of tens of thousands of car enthusiasts; they can use their imagination on the consequences this will have on their business.

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now



  • Latest Posts

    • I got back to Japan in January and was keen to get back on track as quickly as possible. Europe is god-awful for track accessibility (by comparison), so I picked up a first-gen GT86 in December just to have something I could jump into right away. The Skyline came over in a container this time and landed in early January. It was a bit battered after Europe, though—I refused to do anything beyond essential upkeep while it was over there. The clutch master cylinder gave out, and so did the power steering. I didn’t even bother changing the oil; it was the same stuff that went in just before I left Japan the first time. Naughty. Power steering parts would’ve cost double with shipping and taxes, so knowing I’d be heading back to Japan, I just postponed it and powered through the arm workout. It took a solid three months to get the car back on the road. Registration was a nightmare this time around. There were a bunch of BS fees to navigate, and sourcing parts was a headache. I needed stock seats for shaken, mistakenly blew 34k JPY on some ENR34 seats—which, of course, didn’t fit—then ended up having the car’s technical sheet amended to register it as a two-seater with the Brides. Then there’s the GT86. Amazing car. Does everything I want it to do. Parts are cheap, easy to find, and I don’t care what anyone says—it’s super rewarding to drive. I’ve done a few basic mods: diff ratio, coilovers, discs, pads, seat, etc. It already had a new exhaust manifold and the 180kph limiter removed, so I assume it’s running some kind of map. I’ve just been thrashing it at the track non-stop—mostly Fuji Speedway now, since I need something with higher speed after all that autobahn time. The wheels on the R34 always pissed me off—too big, and it was a nightmare getting tires to fit properly under the arches. So I threw in the towel and bought something that fits better. Looks way cleaner too (at least to me)—less hotboy, less attention-seeking. Still an R34, though. Now for future plans. There are a few things still outstanding with the car. First up, the rear subframe needs an overhaul—that’s priority one. Next, I need to figure out an engine rebuild plan. No timeline yet, but I want to keep it economical—not cutting corners, just not throwing tens of thousands at a mechanic I can barely communicate with. And finally, paint. Plus a bit of tidying up here and there.  
    • Nope, needed to clearance under the bar a little with a heat gun, a 1/2" extension as the "clearancer", and big hammer, I was aware of this from the onset, they fit a 2.0 with this intake no problems, but, the 2.5 is around 15mm taller than a 2.0, so "clearancing" was required  It "just" touched when test fitting, now, I have about 10mm of clearance  You cannot see where it was done, and so far, there's no contact when giving it the beans Happy days
    • It's been a while since I've updated this thread. The last year (and some) has been very hectic. In the second-half of 2024 I took the R34 on a trip through Germany, Italy, France and Switzerland - it was f*cking great. I got a little annoyed with the attention the car was getting around Europe and really didn't drive it that much. I could barely work on the car since I was living in an inner-city apartment (with underground parking). During the trip, the car lost power steering in France - split hose - and I ended up driving around 4,000kms with no power steering.  There were a few Nurburgring trips here and there, but in total the R34 amassed just shy of 7,000kms on European roads. Long story short, I broke up with the reason I was transferred to Europe for and requested to be moved back to Japan. The E90, loved it. It was a sunk cost of around EUR 10,000 and I sold it to a friend for EUR 1,500 just to get rid of it quickly. Trust me, moving countries f*cking sucks and I could not be bothered to be as methodical as I was the first time around.
    • I assume clearances were all a-okay?
×
×
  • Create New...