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  • GTS-t VSPEC

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grad.. this was recent like the last 2 weeks. he has a mirage. luckily even though they stole his keys they didnt take his whole system. just the face unit, his neck chain, house keys and 200 bucks. also the new amp he was gonna put in that he bought just after the comp

i hope they get caught

Psiker

Originally posted by G0DF4Th3R

hahahahah psiker... u should have hired a pony for ure 21st so your friends can take turns riding round the garden

i actually wanted either a mechanical bull otr a bouncy castle and sumo suits. so i could get drunk and have suno wars n shit. meh it all sounded fun at the time

psiker

Psiker, sounded familiar cause it happened to me :(

From earlier in the day:

Originally posted by Gradenko

Listen to the guy. Insure, insure, insure.

I had a Pioneer deck+changer, 4 x Alpine 12" ZR's, 2x 1F caps, Alpine 1505, Alpine 305 and MB quart tweets lifted. If I ever find the ****ers who did it, I swear I'm buying a fcuking pallet of quicklime to deal with the problem.

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    • Yep, there's a very minor drift left that happens a few seconds after letting go of the steering wheel, but not enough to bother me. Enjoying the car still!
    • Got you mate. Check your email!
    • I see you've never had to push start your own car... You could save some weight right now...
    • Sounds good.  I don't 100% understand what your getting at here. When you say, "I keep seeing YouTube videos where people have new paint and primer land on the old clearcoat that isn't even dulled down" do you mean this - there is a panel with factory paint, without any prep work, they paint the entire panel with primer, then colour then clear?  If that's what you mean, sure it will "stick" for a year, 2 years, maybe 3 years? Who knows. But at some stage it will flake off and when it does it's going to come off in huge chunks and look horrific.  Of course read your technical data sheet for your paint, but generally speaking, you can apply primer to a scuffed/prepped clear coat. Generally speaking, I wouldn't do this. I would scuff/prep the clear and then lay colour then clear. Adding the primer to these steps just adds cost and time. It will stick to the clear coat provided it has been appropriately scuffed/prepped first.  When you say, "but the new paint is landing on the old clearcoat" I am imagining someone not masking up the car and just letting overspray go wherever it wants. Surely this isn't what you mean?  So I'll assume the following scenario - there is a small scratch. The person manages to somehow fill the scratch and now has a perfectly flat surface. They then spray colour and clear over this small masked off section of the car. Is this what you mean? If this is the case, yes the new paint will eventually flake off in X number of years time.  The easy solution is to scuff/prep all of the paint that hasn't been masked off in the repair area then lay the paint.  So you want to prep the surface, lay primer, then lay filler, then lay primer, then colour, then clear?  Life seems so much simpler if you prep, fill, primer, colour then clear.  There are very few reasons to go to bare metal. Chasing rust is a good example of why you'd go to bare metal.  A simple dent, there is no way in hell I'm going to bare metal for that repair. I've got enough on my plate without creating extra work for myself lol. 
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