Nissan 350Z question

looks to me that this car had transport problems and if the owner is sure that no paint work has been done since he owned it, then the dealer must have made these repairs upon delivery to them ...just use the PP with a finishing pad, seal it up and alert your friend :)
 
Steve - so it sounds like the paint was touoched up or repainted - so there is no clearcoat on the car car on these areas?
 
Steve - so it sounds like the paint was touoched up or repainted - so there is no clearcoat on the car car on these areas?
That is certainly what it sounds like but it also speaks volumes to the guy that did the touch up. When your eye (and I expect you have a critical one) can't see the repair and two different processes were used, he did well.

I have seen a situation where a known repair was done but it was repaired using a base coat/top coat process. When polished the color of the paint was on the pad. As best as I could figure was than when the car was sprayed/blended the base coat fogged a larger area than the clear coat that was put on top of it. It was kind of dirty when I worked on it and I didn't see anything particularly unusual but I spent a great deal of time trying to figure out what might have happed. It actually would shed paint around the area that had been prepared. I did the vehicle again several months later and the problem was not present. I could only attribute it to over spray that was not covered with clear.
 
I took before pictures yesterday (well after a wash and clay) afternoon in the sun. When I post the detail next week, I guess I will see if anybody can tell the diffference. It looks like whomever - did a good job. I am not an expert, but did see anything standing out like a sore thumb.
 
funny that a guy called me recently and he had black paint on his towel ... he had just bought a used black Porsche and didn't examine the car closely ... the previous owner had filled in a bunch of rock chips with some touch up paint... when he was polishing, all the touch up paint came off :wall

LOL I know a guy that always used rustoleum to "touch up" his Porsche...
 
being that this has only happend on bumpers and sideskirts, might the fact that those panels being a diff material might be single staged paint at all? while the other panels are prolly metal, the bumpers and skirts would be plastic/fiberglass. i know my 92 stealth is single stage from the factory, and the bumpers/skirts/spoiler are constantly faded even after a week after a detail as compared to the other body panels
 
That is certainly what it sounds like but it also speaks volumes to the guy that did the touch up. When your eye (and I expect you have a critical one) can't see the repair and two different processes were used, he did well.

I have seen a situation where a known repair was done but it was repaired using a base coat/top coat process. When polished the color of the paint was on the pad. As best as I could figure was than when the car was sprayed/blended the base coat fogged a larger area than the clear coat that was put on top of it. It was kind of dirty when I worked on it and I didn't see anything particularly unusual but I spent a great deal of time trying to figure out what might have happed. It actually would shed paint around the area that had been prepared. I did the vehicle again several months later and the problem was not present. I could only attribute it to over spray that was not covered with clear.


I agree that the person doing the touch up was very well schooled at his art if you couldn't see any blending... I see a guy at our local Honda dealer that comes and does touch up work with what looks like a giant airbrush and does bumpers and light scratches, never any body work, and his work is really good. I think he uses a urethane paint that is not topped with a clear so I would guess it would have to bleed some color when polished. Like I said earlier, with the areas you describe, it sounds like it had a bumpy ride along the way and the bumpers and rocker panels took the beating and needed to be touched up to keep it looking like a new car;)
 
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