Help before hubby finds out!
#1
10th Gear
Thread Starter
Join Date: May 2013
Location: Nj
Posts: 14
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
Help before hubby finds out!
Brand new car and I pulled into the driveway and cut the side of the garage door too close and the car came and contact with the garage door molding and scraped along for a little while. I realized and backed up. Honestly I couldn't see it but he came home and didn't miss a thing. It is still smooth (not dented in) but the top shiny part of the paint is missing and is slightly scraped. He is not spending a penny to fix as I have done this before. Any suggestions on spray paint or the least expensive solution?
#2
Barbara, so sorry it happened to your new car. Back in the day when my wife had done something similar, she came to me and just said she'd done something really bad and made me work it out of her. By the time I did, I felt bad for her and it wasn't an issue. Maybe you should try something similar.
Hey, it's keeping repair shops in business. Don't fret or try to hide it, just be honest. My best advice.
Hey, it's keeping repair shops in business. Don't fret or try to hide it, just be honest. My best advice.
Brand new car and I pulled into the driveway and cut the side of the garage door too close and the car came and contact with the garage door molding and scraped along for a little while. I realized and backed up. Honestly I couldn't see it but he came home and didn't miss a thing. It is still smooth (not dented in) but the top shiny part of the paint is missing and is slightly scraped. He is not spending a penny to fix as I have done this before. Any suggestions on spray paint or the least expensive solution?
#3
10th Gear
Thread Starter
Join Date: May 2013
Location: Nj
Posts: 14
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
Barbara, so sorry it happened to your new car. Back in the day when my wife had done something similar, she came to me and just said she'd done something really bad and made me work it out of her. By the time I did, I felt bad for her and it wasn't an issue. Maybe you should try something similar.
Hey, it's keeping repair shops in business. Don't fret or try to hide it, just be honest. My best advice.
Hey, it's keeping repair shops in business. Don't fret or try to hide it, just be honest. My best advice.
#4
Sorry to hear about it.
I would suggest to stop by a bodyshop and maybe they can do something about it without repaint the panel.
My friend scratched his bumper and thought it needed to repaint, ended up bodyshop just waxed and detailed it to take care the issue. Hardly to see the scratch after.
Good luck.
I would suggest to stop by a bodyshop and maybe they can do something about it without repaint the panel.
My friend scratched his bumper and thought it needed to repaint, ended up bodyshop just waxed and detailed it to take care the issue. Hardly to see the scratch after.
Good luck.
#5
I wouldn't use spray paint because it will probably just make it look worse than it does already.
You might ask your Lexus dealer who they use for light scratch repairs on their used cars. You might find they have someone that is mobile and is less expensive than a body shop for repairs.
You might ask your Lexus dealer who they use for light scratch repairs on their used cars. You might find they have someone that is mobile and is less expensive than a body shop for repairs.
#6
Or you can just keep quiet. If he sees it, just say I don't know.
My wife hit the wall on our garage. It crushed the gypsum board and made a hole about 24 x 12 inches. She put some boxes in front of it so it will not be seen. I was cleaning the garage one day and move aside he boxes. Then I saw it.. I asked her about it. She just laughed. And I laughed too. No big deal. I feel kind of sorry for her for hiding it.
My wife hit the wall on our garage. It crushed the gypsum board and made a hole about 24 x 12 inches. She put some boxes in front of it so it will not be seen. I was cleaning the garage one day and move aside he boxes. Then I saw it.. I asked her about it. She just laughed. And I laughed too. No big deal. I feel kind of sorry for her for hiding it.
#7
Hubby doesn't sound to cool ... not going to fix it because it is just going to happen again??? Nonsense. This is just a stupid little thing that happens in life and isn't worth making a big deal about. The easiest thing to do is take it by a few body shops and get their recommendation. Then you will know where you stand. I would not recommend a do-it-yourself job.
Sometimes things can look like they are scrapped and the shiny surface is gone, but it is really just some material deposited on the surface from the contact. Meguiar's (common car care products) makes a product called Scratch X 2. You can find it an auto parts store where they sell car care products. Carefully rub a little of this product on the lightest part of the problem and see if it disappears. If it does you can carefully remove the problem and then wax the area using something like Meguiar's NXT 2 wax.
Sometimes things can look like they are scrapped and the shiny surface is gone, but it is really just some material deposited on the surface from the contact. Meguiar's (common car care products) makes a product called Scratch X 2. You can find it an auto parts store where they sell car care products. Carefully rub a little of this product on the lightest part of the problem and see if it disappears. If it does you can carefully remove the problem and then wax the area using something like Meguiar's NXT 2 wax.
Trending Topics
#10
The pursuit of F
First, don't spray paint it. It will look worse showing another layer of paint, unless you're a professional painter with the exact color match and will paint the entire panel (s).
I agree with benzo555. When we got our new RX repaired from an accident (other party's fault), the car was repaired nearly flawlessly. The only thing they missed was a scratch (clearcoat scratched) and what they did was wet-sand it and polish it. It was practically gone. Maybe an hour's work of labor, not more... It was repaired at Carstar and have been happy with their work. Good luck
I agree with benzo555. When we got our new RX repaired from an accident (other party's fault), the car was repaired nearly flawlessly. The only thing they missed was a scratch (clearcoat scratched) and what they did was wet-sand it and polish it. It was practically gone. Maybe an hour's work of labor, not more... It was repaired at Carstar and have been happy with their work. Good luck
#11
Driver School Candidate
This may be all you need....
I used a cutting compound and a polishing compound and it all came off, no blood, only some sweat and a few tears.
I kept my cool and she never did it again.
I agree you should pull in and back out and learn to use your mirrors, be careful not to take out the mirrors on the garage frame.
No cell phone or music until you are done backing!..gm
#13
Post a picture here. Might just be a scuff on the clear coat. I recommend a rubbing compound, the polish it out. Make sure you seal it with wax. If the scuff went below the clear coat then you would need a professional.
#14
Pole Position
1 plus on trying a product called scratch out....Used it on several vehicles and you may be surprised......Cheap product sold at auto stores and it may buff out the scrape....
#15
Hubby doesn't sound to cool ... not going to fix it because it is just going to happen again??? Nonsense. This is just a stupid little thing that happens in life and isn't worth making a big deal about. The easiest thing to do is take it by a few body shops and get their recommendation. Then you will know where you stand. I would not recommend a do-it-yourself job.
Sometimes things can look like they are scrapped and the shiny surface is gone, but it is really just some material deposited on the surface from the contact. Meguiar's (common car care products) makes a product called Scratch X 2. You can find it an auto parts store where they sell car care products. Carefully rub a little of this product on the lightest part of the problem and see if it disappears. If it does you can carefully remove the problem and then wax the area using something like Meguiar's NXT 2 wax.
Sometimes things can look like they are scrapped and the shiny surface is gone, but it is really just some material deposited on the surface from the contact. Meguiar's (common car care products) makes a product called Scratch X 2. You can find it an auto parts store where they sell car care products. Carefully rub a little of this product on the lightest part of the problem and see if it disappears. If it does you can carefully remove the problem and then wax the area using something like Meguiar's NXT 2 wax.