Ok, I went to two paint shops yesterday to get estimates on repairing the paint blisters on BABY's hood that she got at the car show on Sun.
I need opinions please as I'm new to paint repairs on Vette's.
The first shop has a lot of experience repairing and painting Vettes. In fact, while I was there he had no less than at least 6 Vettes in his shop ranging from '57's to '72's. Because of the location of the paint blisters on the hood and the fact BABY has a laquer paint job he said it would be next to impossible to only repair the blistered areas without making it noticeable and he wants to respray the entire hood. The problem he is concerned about is that because we aren't sure just how old the current paint job is on BABY when we get the new paint to respray the hood if it doesn't match perfectly we will see a shift in the paint differences all around the edges of the hood against the rest of the car.
He said all we can do is get a pint of the paint mixed up and before spraying it compare it to the car itself and either it will match or it won't.
Assuming the paint matchs close enough he wants about $350 to respray the hood
I know we could paint further out to help 'blend" in the new paint such as extending it out further past the edges of the hood such as to the top edges of the front fenders. If we did this than if there was any slight mismatch in the paint colors as it would end at a part of the car that now slopes down it probably wouldn't be noticable. The issue here would be that i'm sure doing this larger job would be MUCH more expensive and I can't afford it right now.
the 2nd shop i went to I know has done Vettes but not as many and their first reaction was to recommend I go to another shop - turns out their recommended shop I go to was the first place i'd already seen. their reason was simply that they spray more "metal" cars where the 1st place sprays more 'glass" cars so the shops tend to send appropiate customers to each other.
BUT, if I did decide i wanted them to do the work he would want to repair the blistered area only, not respray the entire hood. He would use a base/clear paint instead of laquer. I questioned using a base/clear patch on a laquer paint job but he said that by doing that he could reapir the damaged area only instead of requiring doing the entire hood as he can 'feather or blend in" the repaired area whereas he can't do that using laquer. He didn't seem to have any lack of confidence in being able to match the color on the existing paint job and make the repair basically "invisible". Thier pricing on the job though is much more at around $1000
So, what i have are 2 shops. One who is very experienced in Vettes and in spraying laquer but tells me we could be very "iffy" in getting a perfect color match so the repainted hood might be noticable. His rates are also much more reasonable. The other shop does less Vettes, wants to respray using base/clear, not laquer, is much more expensive, but seems to think he can match it perfectly ( or at least blend it in better so the 'repair lines' aren't noticeable).
Can anyone here with painting experiece please help me out? opinions? advise? recommendations?
:confused
Sorry this message got so long winded, I was just trying to explain in as much detail as possible so you could understand the issues as good as possible.
Barry
I need opinions please as I'm new to paint repairs on Vette's.
The first shop has a lot of experience repairing and painting Vettes. In fact, while I was there he had no less than at least 6 Vettes in his shop ranging from '57's to '72's. Because of the location of the paint blisters on the hood and the fact BABY has a laquer paint job he said it would be next to impossible to only repair the blistered areas without making it noticeable and he wants to respray the entire hood. The problem he is concerned about is that because we aren't sure just how old the current paint job is on BABY when we get the new paint to respray the hood if it doesn't match perfectly we will see a shift in the paint differences all around the edges of the hood against the rest of the car.
He said all we can do is get a pint of the paint mixed up and before spraying it compare it to the car itself and either it will match or it won't.
Assuming the paint matchs close enough he wants about $350 to respray the hood
I know we could paint further out to help 'blend" in the new paint such as extending it out further past the edges of the hood such as to the top edges of the front fenders. If we did this than if there was any slight mismatch in the paint colors as it would end at a part of the car that now slopes down it probably wouldn't be noticable. The issue here would be that i'm sure doing this larger job would be MUCH more expensive and I can't afford it right now.
the 2nd shop i went to I know has done Vettes but not as many and their first reaction was to recommend I go to another shop - turns out their recommended shop I go to was the first place i'd already seen. their reason was simply that they spray more "metal" cars where the 1st place sprays more 'glass" cars so the shops tend to send appropiate customers to each other.
BUT, if I did decide i wanted them to do the work he would want to repair the blistered area only, not respray the entire hood. He would use a base/clear paint instead of laquer. I questioned using a base/clear patch on a laquer paint job but he said that by doing that he could reapir the damaged area only instead of requiring doing the entire hood as he can 'feather or blend in" the repaired area whereas he can't do that using laquer. He didn't seem to have any lack of confidence in being able to match the color on the existing paint job and make the repair basically "invisible". Thier pricing on the job though is much more at around $1000
So, what i have are 2 shops. One who is very experienced in Vettes and in spraying laquer but tells me we could be very "iffy" in getting a perfect color match so the repainted hood might be noticable. His rates are also much more reasonable. The other shop does less Vettes, wants to respray using base/clear, not laquer, is much more expensive, but seems to think he can match it perfectly ( or at least blend it in better so the 'repair lines' aren't noticeable).
Can anyone here with painting experiece please help me out? opinions? advise? recommendations?
:confused
Sorry this message got so long winded, I was just trying to explain in as much detail as possible so you could understand the issues as good as possible.
Barry