What's with Honda's paint?
#31
silver is the most durable color and doesn't show dirt.
I'm going back to silver or another light color on my next car.
My smoky granite mica gets hot under the sun, and there's some tiny pitting on the roof, probably because it gets soft when hot. I wax it regularly.
I have a feeling the pitting might lead to peeling in a few years.
I see those hondas with peeling paint on the hood and roof. They're usually all swirled and scratched.
Looks like they use brillo pads and Dawn to wash their cars.
I'm going back to silver or another light color on my next car.
My smoky granite mica gets hot under the sun, and there's some tiny pitting on the roof, probably because it gets soft when hot. I wax it regularly.
I have a feeling the pitting might lead to peeling in a few years.
I see those hondas with peeling paint on the hood and roof. They're usually all swirled and scratched.
Looks like they use brillo pads and Dawn to wash their cars.
#32
Don't know if you all have noticed but I've seen countless Hondas from various model years with fading, oxidizing paint finishes. Some are really, really bad. An employee here has a 7 year old black Accord and I've watched as the paint has progressively been eaten away by the sun.
What is the issue with their paint and has it been corrected?
What is the issue with their paint and has it been corrected?
#33
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#34
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I see those hondas with peeling paint on the hood and roof. They're usually all swirled and scratched. Looks like they use brillo pads and Dawn to wash their cars.
Some of those automated car washes will do that to virtually any car and paint. I avoid them like the plague, and insist on washing by hand.
Last edited by mmarshall; 06-22-14 at 02:14 PM.
#35
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#36
At one time, especially in the days before clearcoats, silver was one of the LEAST durable colors, and had a reputation for fading almost overnight. That's because, like red, silver had very small, microscopic particles of iron in the pigment, and if the paint was to kept religiously waxed, the iron particles oxidized on contact with the air, and caused fading. Mercedes, more than any other single company, perfected the modern gleaming-silvers we see today....though, of course, clearcoat itself was major advance.
Some of those automated car washes will do that to virtually any car and paint. I avoid them like the plague, and insist on washing by hand.
Some of those automated car washes will do that to virtually any car and paint. I avoid them like the plague, and insist on washing by hand.
#38
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#40
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Lol. There is no "issue" with their paint. The issue is with lazy careless owners that never bother to wax the car either themselves or because they can't afford a decent detail/wax job. And they probably park outside, under trees, follow other vehicles too close(rock chips) etc. all bad habits that help accelerate paint deterioration.
Paint is but one organ of a vehicle just like your skin is an organ of the body. Treat it like **** and it will look like ****.
Lazy people in the mitsu world used to claim the same thing but if one analyzes the community and demographic it's typically lazy or cheap people with low standards for the reason that the paint looks terrible.
Paint is but one organ of a vehicle just like your skin is an organ of the body. Treat it like **** and it will look like ****.
Lazy people in the mitsu world used to claim the same thing but if one analyzes the community and demographic it's typically lazy or cheap people with low standards for the reason that the paint looks terrible.
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