Hey Guys,
Recently I went off course during a winter safety driving school up in NH, and I ended up hitting/brushing up against a snowbank. The car suffered some scratching to the front right and rear right portions of the bumper.
I took the car to a bodyshop, and just picked it up today. They did an excellent job, and it literally looks brand new.
Although, when I took it in it was quite dirty, and they made an estimate for me. I brought it back the next day to drop it off, and it was squeaky clean.
Today when I picked it up, everything was perfect except for one small area, that was not in the estimate. I asked the manager simply "If there was another section that was affected, why not just call me and ask about it?" he responded with some excuses, something along the lines of "we didn't do it, we totally missed it, and i'm gonna yell at my bonehead tech who worked on it now". I honestly didn't remember this chip before I brought the car in, but lucky for me I took pictures of the car in the parking lot when i dropped it off.
My pictures show that I DID cause the damage myself, and it's not their fault.
I brought the car home just a few hours ago, and I'm happy to have it back. Although over time this chip might expand, and could develop rust perhaps.
Therefore, I'm here to post some pics, and show you guys the damage. Do you have any recommendations as how to fix this "myself"? I have a Ultimate Detailing Machine, P21S, KAIO, Meg #26,7, etc and some other stuff, and a few pads. Im not sure if I have touch up paint in my color, but I can easily get some as the dealer is close to my home.
I read the article here: Using Car Polish to Remove Swirl Marks, Scratches, Water Spots
Perhaps I could "break" the flake, and then paint over it and then sand it? Who knows, any ideas will be appreciated. Either way if I screw it up bigtime, or it doesn't come out good, I might just take it back and have them fix it, but its in a really inconspicuous area, but I'm just afraid of the rust factor.
Wow, that was long. I've learned a lot here about detailing, and hoping to learn more.
Thanks guys!
All visible damage here has been fixed, and looks brand new!
Recently I went off course during a winter safety driving school up in NH, and I ended up hitting/brushing up against a snowbank. The car suffered some scratching to the front right and rear right portions of the bumper.
I took the car to a bodyshop, and just picked it up today. They did an excellent job, and it literally looks brand new.
Although, when I took it in it was quite dirty, and they made an estimate for me. I brought it back the next day to drop it off, and it was squeaky clean.
Today when I picked it up, everything was perfect except for one small area, that was not in the estimate. I asked the manager simply "If there was another section that was affected, why not just call me and ask about it?" he responded with some excuses, something along the lines of "we didn't do it, we totally missed it, and i'm gonna yell at my bonehead tech who worked on it now". I honestly didn't remember this chip before I brought the car in, but lucky for me I took pictures of the car in the parking lot when i dropped it off.
My pictures show that I DID cause the damage myself, and it's not their fault.
I brought the car home just a few hours ago, and I'm happy to have it back. Although over time this chip might expand, and could develop rust perhaps.
Therefore, I'm here to post some pics, and show you guys the damage. Do you have any recommendations as how to fix this "myself"? I have a Ultimate Detailing Machine, P21S, KAIO, Meg #26,7, etc and some other stuff, and a few pads. Im not sure if I have touch up paint in my color, but I can easily get some as the dealer is close to my home.
I read the article here: Using Car Polish to Remove Swirl Marks, Scratches, Water Spots
Perhaps I could "break" the flake, and then paint over it and then sand it? Who knows, any ideas will be appreciated. Either way if I screw it up bigtime, or it doesn't come out good, I might just take it back and have them fix it, but its in a really inconspicuous area, but I'm just afraid of the rust factor.
Wow, that was long. I've learned a lot here about detailing, and hoping to learn more.
Thanks guys!

All visible damage here has been fixed, and looks brand new!
