Accumulator
Well-known member
melissa809- ah jeeze...hope your luck changes, like..starting right now.
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
There should be no reason why a body shop would wash your car and/or get overspray on it if you're just have a bumper replaced. They can quickly remove the cover from the car and park the car outside away from potential overspray issues. Then, when the bumper is ready to be reinstalled pull the car back in and assemble it.
always keep in mind, you can never duplicate the durability of a factory finish. no matter the paint or the booth bake, a repaint will always be softer and therefore much easier to scratch/damage. the good thing: you generally have more clear to polish when it does get damaged. and Ford loves tri-coats, which equal very difficult to match correctly in all types of lighting. hopefully its black or white.
This rule was the very first thing taught to us when I went to the nation's leading auto body school, taught by an instructor with over 40 years of experience, of which I was the class president out of 35 people. I've painted many cars myself, using top of the line products, and have worked on hundreds of fresh paint jobs as we have relations with several local body shops to do wet sanding and final finish work. I don't speak of things I know little about. When I write something on here, you can be sure it's with absolute confidence, and experience. It's up to you if you want advice from someone who "had a brother who got a bumper painted one time" versus a guy thats painted and/or worked on hundreds of them in a high end bake booth. Go tour a final assembly plant where they paint the vehicles (my dad worked in one for 35 years) and tell me that the process is anything close to what a body shop does. It's not.
...I paint on the side and bumpers take all of 20 minutes to take off and put back on.