Bike fell on new car; assess my damage...

Surfer8210

New member
I am not happy.



I walk into the garage this morning to find that a bike and small wooden cabinent placed along the side of garage wall, fell onto the hood and front bumper of the car.



Damage = 5-6 inch vertical scratches, from top of front bumper to the bottom. The scratches dont seem too deep. Though rubbing my fingernail along the paint I can definitely feel "roughness" where the scratches are (and they are quite visible), my fingernail will not get stuck. Actually, I can glide my fingernail across with ease over the scratches.



Thought, comments? Is this body shop work?
 
It can probably be made good enough for 90% of people without a trip to the bodyshop... I'd hit it with a PC and 4" pads and 1Z Extra, see if you can live with that. If not, try having a local detailer touchup, wetsand and rotary buff it - if that's still not good enough, it will likely take a paint gun to perfect.



What color is it? certain colors are very difficult to match (metallics) and you will likely be happier wetsanding and polishing it than using any touch-up paint or repainting the hood.
 
themightytimmah said:
It can probably be made good enough for 90% of people without a trip to the bodyshop... I'd hit it with a PC and 4" pads and 1Z Extra, see if you can live with that. If not, try having a local detailer touchup, wetsand and rotary buff it - if that's still not good enough, it will likely take a paint gun to perfect.



What color is it? certain colors are very difficult to match (metallics) and you will likely be happier wetsanding and polishing it than using any touch-up paint or repainting the hood.

thanks for the info.



the color is of the car is black (non-metallic).



I dont have a PC. Never used one either. The strongest thing I got right now is Meguiar's No. 9. Thing is though, the car was built just 2 months ago so I'm worried if it would be too abrasive on the new paint. I would think its cured by now, but still.



What do you think?
 
Your car is cured the day they build it. They use a baked curing method at the factory, so it's not like re-spray jobs at a body shop where it takes 30 days for the paint to gas out and cure. Go for it with #9, but that probably isn't going to do too much applying by hand unless you're really patient.
 
By the time you go out and buy the proper products/equipment to *maybe* correct the damage, it's may be cheaper and wiser to have a body shop or pro detailer give it a try or take a look at it 1st. Just a quick thought.
 
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