Looks like fun. Perhaps the answer to painting the MR2's rims with rally tires:
I'm hoping that car was highlighter yellow to begin with......also, imagine messing with Mike's Express washes with that.......
Did the hood of my Suburban with matte black Plastidip because I was too lazy to sand it smooth after I repaired some rust. It hides the imperfections pretty well. It's been holding up great after being out all winter.
I plasitdipped the "A" pillars and hardtop on the miata. I think it looks great considering I spent $8 on it. Plus it bonds to itself, so it's pretty forgiving.
Did my whole RX-7 in this thread. Lots of pics/etc. in that thread.
Did my whole car as well. Details in this thread.
In reply to Armitage and nicksta43:
Thank you both for your Plastidip threads; I'm really looking forward to updates on your projects.
Hint: I'm looking at doing this with two cars and want some input on long-term results.
Will this stuff stick to chrome? My father backed my truck into a stone wall and I bought what I thought was a factory replacement bumper. It turned out to be a cheap Chinese repro and started rusting within six months. Since I haven't found a replacement yet, the idea of covering it with gray Plastidip is appealing.
Also interested in long-term results.
I'm seriously considering doing this to the Miata once I get a hardtop for it. The bumper is faded to pink and I've cracked the pain at 4 corners with my heavy handed use of the fender roller.
Jerry wrote: I'm just debating wheel colors now. Keep going back n forth between white, red and blaze orange.
how does it stand up to brake temps ... for a track car ?
wbjones wrote:Jerry wrote: I'm just debating wheel colors now. Keep going back n forth between white, red and blaze orange.how does it stand up to brake temps ... for a track car ?
The guy on the DYC website has had his (straight-through) exhaust tips 'dipped' for a while, and they're holding up well. Probably get a little warmer than track wheels. Check out the website; I'm impressed with 'dipping' and might try it on my truck.
I've seen scores of well-done examples since I found the site over the weekend. I really wanted to do something with the donated rims & thought about regular paint. Then I found this and all the examples and how easy it looks. I believe I read somewhere if you use liberal amounts of tire shine, you don't even have to mask the tires, it'll peel right off easily.
So now I'm back in color decision mode. I'll make up my mind on white, then see some awesome day-glo orange rims and go "yeah!" But then I'll see nicely done white ones and think "that's it". Till I see some nice red ones......
I wouldn't plastidip anyone.. she would have to be cute...
Seriously, I did the faded scuffed plastichrome on the grill of my volvo when I got it 3 months ago.. still holding up well
Would it be as easy as cleaning and then spraying the wheels with a rattle can? Then scraping it off the tires?
93EXCivic wrote: This might be a stupid but how much weight does plastidipping a whole car add?
I wondered that too.
Duke wrote:93EXCivic wrote: This might be a stupid but how much weight does plastidipping a whole car add?I wondered that too.
If you used three gallons, as it appears the poster did for his FD RX7, I suspect it would be the weight of those three gallons. Not insignificant, but not statistically significant either as a percentage of the weight if the car.
I remember when NASA stopped painting the main tank on the shuttle rockets. I think the weight savings was in the multiple tons . . .
ZOO wrote: I remember when NASA stopped painting the main tank on the shuttle rockets. I think the weight savings was in the multiple tons . . .
According to one of my professors that was involved with the shuttle, it was around 600 lbs and saved around $15k in mid-1980's money. The final tank was something like 16,000 lighter than the first one.
The reason they painted it in the first place was to protect the insulation foam from UV light exposure during transportation and sitting on the pad. It wasn't for aesthetics.
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