Poodles;1896211 said:Might as well rhino-line your car...
After looking at that web site the glossifier is $66 a gallon and the base is $58 a gallon plus the everything you need to spray it why not just put that money towards a legitimate paint job? Or are people now days that indecisive to pick a color and stay with it?:dunno:PureDrifter;1896492 said:if only it was removable...
You guys do realize it doesnt HAVE to be matte finish right? If you spray it by the gallon you can mix your own colors, go metallic/pearl, and add glossifier, which lets you go from a satin all the way to a full gloss finish...
and yes, still removable (easily, if you properly clean the surface and use enough coats. too few and it comes off in small pieces).
ex:
[video=youtube;F_Dw2fVoIqA]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F_Dw2fVoIqA[/video]
You guys need to stop comparing this to a spray bomb and more as an alternative to a vinyl wrap, but much, much cheaper.
PureDrifter;1896492 said:if only it was removable...
You guys do realize it doesnt HAVE to be matte finish right? If you spray it by the gallon you can mix your own colors, go metallic/pearl, and add glossifier, which lets you go from a satin all the way to a full gloss finish...
and yes, still removable (easily, if you properly clean the surface and use enough coats. too few and it comes off in small pieces).
ex:
[video=youtube;F_Dw2fVoIqA]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F_Dw2fVoIqA[/video]
You guys need to stop comparing this to a spray bomb and more as an alternative to a vinyl wrap, but much, much cheaper.
I can see that working well 8)RazoE;1896234 said:I love plastidip. I only do it to black trim parts like the sail panels, and the windshield cowl, though.
PureDrifter;1896492 said:if only it was removable...
You guys do realize it doesnt HAVE to be matte finish right? If you spray it by the gallon you can mix your own colors, go metallic/pearl, and add glossifier, which lets you go from a satin all the way to a full gloss finish...
and yes, still removable (easily, if you properly clean the surface and use enough coats. too few and it comes off in small pieces).
ex:
[video=youtube;F_Dw2fVoIqA]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F_Dw2fVoIqA[/video]
You guys need to stop comparing this to a spray bomb and more as an alternative to a vinyl wrap, but much, much cheaper.
Poodles;1896499 said:Yet it's not as safe as a wrap to the underlying paint.
PureDrifter;1896785 said:based on what? Even wraps can damage paint when prepped/applied improperly, or using the wrong type of product.
Also, the total cost for 3gal of the florescent (most expensive) dip and a gallon of glossifier is LESS than $300.
I BELIEVE (but can't remember) that there's a few people who've run the flat black dips for a couple years and then showed videos of them removing it without major issue or paint problems, but i forget if it was on youtube or on the DYC forum. Longevity really depends on how many coats you apply and basically is limited by chipping and the like, as far as i can tell.
So let's weigh it out:
Pros:
-removable
-better looking than a spray can job
-options for matte/satin/gloss
-minimal surface prep
-minimal disassembly
-relatively cheap (wayy cheaper than a proper paint job, at least ~1/2-1/3 the cost of vinyl in materials alone)
Cons:
-Stigma of using plasti dip (aka haters)
-questions about long term durability
-Possible paint damage if applied improperly or to already severely damaged paint.
-not a humongous range of stock colors
All in all, I think it's a good option for someone looking for a temporary-mid length color change, or simply wanting something different. It obviously isn't a substitute for having a car repainted but for those not looking to drop $3000-5000 and up, it's a valid option.
I'm not going to argue with you until you come up with some concrete evidence showing it's not removable, aren't you supposed to be known for always wanting hard proof? maaco is a joke, especially their prep work.Poodles;1896798 said:lol, more like:
Pros:
-removable (maybe)
-better looking than a spray can job (definately not if you know what you're doing)
-options for matte/satin/gloss (i.e. old rhino-line, new rhino-line, and terrible worse-than-maaco paintjob)
-minimal surface prep (not if you want it to stick well or remove easy later)
-minimal disassembly (depends how good of a job you want to do)
-relatively cheap (wayy cheaper than a proper paint job, at least ~1/2-1/3 the cost of vinyl in materials alone) (maaco is cheaper and looks better and will last longer)
Cons:
-Stigma of using plasti dip (aka haters) (lol, all of a sudden I'm a hater for not wanting a subpar product on my car)
-questions about long term durability (definately)
-Possible paint damage if applied improperly or to already severely damaged paint. (I'd say the risk is higher than that, going to depends how long it's left on, etc)
-not a humongous range of stock colors (yep)
PureDrifter;1896816 said:I'm not going to argue with you until you come up with some concrete evidence showing it's not removable, aren't you supposed to be known for always wanting hard proof? maaco is a joke, especially their prep work.
PureDrifter;1896816 said:Are you really going to compare the massive level of prep work needed for painting a car (sanding, trim removal, priming, sanding again, etc...) to just making sure the surface of the paint is clean and free of contaminants? REALLY? Not even going to go into the difference in skill required to properly paint a car vs. the relatively forgiving process of spraying plasti dip.
PureDrifter;1896816 said:A hater is a person who instead of presenting an argument with facts and evidence, bashes a product, brands it to be "crap" or "subpar", and sticks to that when counter evidence is presented.
No, it isn't cheaper. You don't HAVE to use the most expensive colors, or glossifier. Decent paint and materials will run you more imho since you'll be buying gallons of primer, base, and clear.Poodles;1896833 said:Gonna have to do some to properly plastidip anyway, do it yourself and your paintjob is even cheaper.
apples to apples: if the paint's far gone, you ONLY have to sand it smooth, plasti dip will stick to damn near anything provided it's still attached to the substrate. STILL easier than stripping a car down for paint.Poodles;1896833 said:Compare apples to apples here, if your paint is so far gone, the pastidip isn't going to stick. You'll have to prep it anyway. There really is no comparison here, the only comparison is going to be to vinyl wrap, which can be done yourself relatively cheaply, and doesn't look like the worst orange peal known to man.
Poodles;1896833 said:What to know the difference between a crap paint job and a good one? Everyone says prep work, but you can spraybomb a car and then go back and wetsand and polish it and it will look fantastic. That's something you can't do with pastidip.
Correction, a "hater" is a simple term used to try and discredit someone that doesn't like what you like.
Sside;1896947 said:I agree with PureDrifter..... PlastiDip is a great alternative to "Maco and all the Maco's of the world who do a terrible paint Job"...... I think its clear (No Pun) that PlastiDip will come off 10X more easy than any paint job/paint job that goes wrong or you just simply arent happy with the color...
A while back I had some shop paint my nose panel and guess what, 3 months later it was cracking and pealing off...... $300 bucks down the drain for a simple nose panel.... My alternative was PlastiDip.... So I did it........ Its been over a year and its still on the car with no signs of it coming off.... I have used PlastiDip on emblems before in the stuff is really easy to spray especially if you have some experience using spray cans.....
Personally as in my opinion..... I love the look of it... If done right PlastiDip will not look like orange peel but it will be smooth like a rubber wrap around the car and in my opinion I think it looks amazing...... Yes it will get alot of haters (not anyone here in particular) but out on the streets...... Still I believe there is a big diference from paiting a car with duplicolor cans and painting it right..The same is for PlastiDip, you can use the cans and have a bad finish or you can a get like the one dyc sells and do it right.
Okay..... I been debating this with myself since yesterday..... Do I do it for the sake of this thread.... I am honestly leaning towards yes.... I would love to see my car in flat red and no, not flat red paint or red glossy like the rest of the Sups out there..... I mean PlastiDip flat red....... But for me its not soo much the I want my car to be "badass" kind of deal its more of I think it must be soo much freaking fun to do it lol..... I literally just want to do it.... So what ya think PureDrifter? Do I pull the trigger? Red or White? I would love to do with those colors and post pictures....
PureDrifter;1896977 said:I would go with the pure white with glossifier lol. Otherwise go nuts with it and get one of the Blaze colors (blaze orange mkiii?).
Or join the DYC forum and look at their custom color lists.