I was playing soccer yesterday and accidentally hit my car a couple of times and didn't realize it left a couple of scratches. I desperately need a way of covering up the scratches. I've tried googling but their methods aren't an option for me at the moment. Any suggestions would be helpful
covering up Car Scratches
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ePdeLay
Australia220 Posts
I was playing soccer yesterday and accidentally hit my car a couple of times and didn't realize it left a couple of scratches. I desperately need a way of covering up the scratches. I've tried googling but their methods aren't an option for me at the moment. Any suggestions would be helpful | ||
Paljas
Germany6926 Posts
or got to a car repair shop. | ||
haduken
Australia8267 Posts
Obviously it doesn't beat real panel work but for small scratches if you put in some effort it can look like new. If you don't mind spending about $200 then you can try getting one of those mobile touch up people to come. They are like onsite mobile techs but do fixes for scratches, dent etc.... Here, found a link for you. http://www.touchuppaints.com.au/ | ||
Heh_
Singapore2712 Posts
On September 25 2012 18:58 ePdeLay wrote: Hey guys, I was playing soccer yesterday and accidentally hit my car a couple of times and didn't realize it left a couple of scratches. I desperately need a way of covering up the scratches. I've tried googling but their methods aren't an option for me at the moment. Any suggestions would be helpful You mean your parent's car? Or someone else's car. If it was your own car, you wouldn't be so desperate to fix it. But a crappy DIY paintjob ain't gonna cut it. In fact, it'll probably make it look worse. Like this: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-19349921 So get some pros to fix it. | ||
thoraxe
United States1449 Posts
On September 26 2012 01:58 Heh_ wrote: You mean your parent's car? Or someone else's car. If it was your own car, you wouldn't be so desperate to fix it. But a crappy DIY paintjob ain't gonna cut it. In fact, it'll probably make it look worse. Like this: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-19349921 So get some pros to fix it. Just because you don't take care of your car doesn't mean nobody else does, he could have a 1967 corvette and you wouldn't know it. I actually did a touch up job with those little bottles of paint from Walmart that are for cars on my 2002 Ford Taurus. OP: I'd probably use one of those if you have a walmart nearby, it might not exactly match with your car, but if you can match the paint color number from your car to the one in the bottle, it might look darn near close to perfect. | ||
ePdeLay
Australia220 Posts
On September 26 2012 01:58 Heh_ wrote: You mean your parent's car? Or someone else's car. If it was your own car, you wouldn't be so desperate to fix it. But a crappy DIY paintjob ain't gonna cut it. In fact, it'll probably make it look worse. Like this: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-19349921 So get some pros to fix it. haha your right :/ thnks | ||
ePdeLay
Australia220 Posts
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joshie0808
Canada1023 Posts
In my experience: Nu Finish Scratch Doctor (it sucks, waste of money). http://www.walmart.com/ip/Nu-Finish-Scratch-Doctor/16927988 Meguiar Scratch X 2.0 (works great) http://www.walmart.com/ip/Meguiar-s-ScratchX-2.0/16550259 | ||
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