View Poll Results: What will you be using to protect your paint? | |||
Paint Protection Film | 4 | 11.11% | |
Ceramic Coat | 7 | 19.44% | |
Both PPF and CC | 15 | 41.67% | |
Traditional wax and sealants | 2 | 5.56% | |
Raw Doggin | 8 | 22.22% | |
Voters: 36. You may not vote on this poll |
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03-15-2021, 11:28 AM | #1 |
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How are you protecting your paint on new G8x?
I am wondering how everyone plans to protect their paint. I have always waxed my own cars in the past, but want to start this one off right. Am looking into ceramic, paint protection film, both, or just wax/sealants.
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03-15-2021, 11:51 AM | #2 |
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Without knowing why people are voting for what they vote for, it's not worth wondering who's doing what. Your use case isn't their use case.
- how long will you keep the car? - did you buy it or lease it? - do you live in Arizona or Chicago? - are you going with real ceramic or shitty spray stuff? - are you going with Xpel ultimate or shitty ppf? BMW dealers will ppf the front of these cars for most buyers. "You'll be protected against those nasty rocks and your payment will go up by just $10/month" "OMG OK!" The BMW dealers (same owner) in my city have started ppf'ing cars as soon as they come in, so you don't have a choice about paying for it because they're not gonna peel it off for you and eat the cost. This probably doesn't apply to cars you order because that should be at your discretion entirely. |
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03-23-2021, 06:05 PM | #4 |
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03-23-2021, 08:37 PM | #5 | |
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Also, after you get rock chips (which is inevitable on any car), a simple touch-up pen won't hide the dimple from the chip on the paint-you're basically coloring in a hole, but the hole is still there and applying PPF over rock chips only amplify them to your eye. To get rock chips properly dealt with requires wet sanding and a lot of detailing work, and I can't even begin imagining what detailers will charge for that. The "normal" paint correction they do before applying PPF won't cover your chips. Hence, if you want PPF, you should go straight from dealer to detailer. If you drive your car for awhile and then choose to get a PPF, it's gonna be substantially more money that you could've saved cuz of all the stuff they need to fix and paint correct. So for a glossy paint, you can just partial PPF the areas prone to road rash (rock chips etc) and leave the rest of the car to polish, but you can't polish matte paint so you would ideally get matte PPF for the whole car but that's expensive so some people just get regular paint and matte PPF whole car and you basically get a frozen finish and the whole car is PPfed at the same time, and you save the matte paint cost. |
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03-24-2021, 09:44 AM | #6 | |
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03-27-2021, 05:51 PM | #8 |
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I mean, ceramic coating, which most ppl go for, won't protect you against scratches, road rash, basically anything physical. It's just for chemical protection, some water spot protection, and water beading properties aka easier cleaning. If you look at the big picture, that's not hugely different from not applying anything to the paint. And this is a M3, not an exotic. It's a daily, not something you need to protect and keep hidden away. A lot of ppl are leasing, in which case it makes no sense to spend a few grand to protect the paint on the bank's car. And at the end of the day, remember it's a M3-it's meant to be enjoyed and driven and it's a car where you don't necessarily need to be fussy about the condition of the paint.
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03-27-2021, 06:25 PM | #9 | |
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