sjwhiteley
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Black is particularly difficult to keep looking good. While I’m not a fan of ceramic coating (nothing wrong with it, in fact, it’s excellent) if I went with a black car, I think ceramic is a must.
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Black is particularly difficult to keep looking good. While I’m not a fan of ceramic coating (nothing wrong with it, in fact, it’s excellent) if I went with a black car, I think ceramic is a must.
Think of it this way, you spend $3500 on a ceramic coating. Car looks perfect, now you’ve got to hope the shop or person that did it for you offers monthly maintenance on the coating. If they don’t, now you have to maintain it with ceramic coating specific products, which aren’t cheap. Then you have to worry about people denting your vehicle. Ceramic coating doesn’t prevent that from happening. Or worse, you get in a vehicle accident and have to have several panels replaced or repainted. Now your having to pay for more coating. While ceramic coatings look nice, without the proper maintenance or if it’s damaged you’re just throwing your money down the drain. A good clay bar, compound, polish, glaze, wax is easier for some pplcurious about your comments regarding ceramic coatings?
Think of it this way, you spend $3500 on a ceramic coating. Car looks perfect, now you’ve got to hope the shop or person that did it for you offers monthly maintenance on the coating. If they don’t, now you have to maintain it with ceramic coating specific products, which aren’t cheap. Then you have to worry about people denting your vehicle. Ceramic coating doesn’t prevent that from happening. Or worse, you get in a vehicle accident and have to have several panels replaced or repainted. Now your having to pay for more coating. While ceramic coatings look nice, without the proper maintenance or if it’s damaged you’re just throwing your money down the drain. A good clay bar, compound, polish, glaze, wax is easier for some ppl
Obviously, everyone wants their car looking nice and pristine, as close or better than new car as long as possible. Black is a very difficult color to keep looking good - or rather, closer to that new car shine. Ceramic coatings help keep it that way a lot longer.
Its hard to stave off the inevitable, though, if you drive your car on a more daily basis. Dings, scrapes, chips. Regular, proper, washing and it still looks good. Even with ceramic coating, while it’ll look even better after a wash if the coating is taken care of, it still needs washing.
Probably would’ve chipped off when they bake it under UV lighting to cure it. And again, if it did chip with the ceramic coating on it you’d be back in the shop paying for another bumper to be ceramic coated after having it repainted...I dont think anyone is suggesting that ceramic eliminates washing.
On our '17 Platinum F350 triple white - the pain was so thin on the front bumper that in less than 12k miles it was full of chips (and I dont drive on dirt roads)...the ceramic coating would have protected that paint (at least some)...I should have used ceramic AND 3M clear bra on that truck....the at 25k miles bumper looked like some jr high school teenager
Think of it this way, you spend $3500 on a ceramic coating. Car looks perfect, now you’ve got to hope the shop or person that did it for you offers monthly maintenance on the coating. If they don’t, now you have to maintain it with ceramic coating specific products, which aren’t cheap. Then you have to worry about people denting your vehicle. Ceramic coating doesn’t prevent that from happening. Or worse, you get in a vehicle accident and have to have several panels replaced or repainted. Now your having to pay for more coating. While ceramic coatings look nice, without the proper maintenance or if it’s damaged you’re just throwing your money down the drain. A good clay bar, compound, polish, glaze, wax is easier for some ppl
Before jumping to conclusions and assumptions, that $3500 is for a paint decon, wash, multi stage paint correction, 3M or Suntek PPF, two layers of cquartz ceramic coating on all vehicle surfaces, wheels off undercarriage decon and coating, cquartz ceramic on wheels AND comes with bi annual coating maintenance built in for 7 years. But I digress, CaryOh Plati16...here we go again.
$3500 for a coating?! LOL
I get my entire massive SUV’s heavily wrapped (entire hood, fenders, all bumpers and bottom half of doors), cleaned, detailed, coated and tinted for $3500.
Ceramic QD’s, ceramic safe washes and maintainers can be had for as low as $20/bottle that will last you a year.
Before jumping to conclusions and assumptions, that $3500 is for a paint decon, wash, multi stage paint correction, 3M or Suntek PPF, two layers of cquartz ceramic coating on all vehicle surfaces, wheels off undercarriage decon and coating, cquartz ceramic on wheels AND comes with bi annual coating maintenance built in for 7 years. But I digress, Cary
Think of it this way, you spend $3500 on a ceramic coating.
Yeah you don’t just roll your truck up to a shop and they lay the coating down. I mean, you might, but normally there’s a ton of work required to prep for ceramic coatingYour words. Not my conclusions.
there’s a ton of work required to prep for ceramic coating
Thts all part of the package. You get what you pay for so instead of some random “certified” shmuckatelli with a orbital polisher and meguiars products followed up by a single layer of c quartz probably not even cured for $1000. I’ve seen both first hand and you can tell the $1000 job from the $3500 job.That work doesn’t need to include, taking the wheels off, ‘correcting’ the paint, tinting the windows and wrapping the car.
A reputable shop can do a ceramic for $1000 on an SUV.
Only a fool would ceramic coat without performing a paint correction. Even on a brand new car the factory paint has issues. Same goes for the wheels, why coat the vehicle and skip the wheels. The wheels on my Navigator are the most difficult part of cleaning the vehicle, the ceramic coating makes that job amazingly easy. $3500 is what I paid as well and that was the going rate based on the quotes I was getting. I did not opt for the ‘new delivery service’ where the detailer trailers your newly delivered vehicle, which is still covered in the plastic from the factory, to his shop for the work. I wish I had, though.That work doesn’t need to include, taking the wheels off, ‘correcting’ the paint, tinting the windows and wrapping the car.
A reputable shop can do a ceramic for $1000 on an SUV.
Thts all part of the package. You get what you pay for so instead of some random “certified” shmuckatelli with a orbital polisher and meguiars products followed up by a single layer of c quartz probably not even cured for $1000. I’ve seen both first hand and you can tell the $1000 job from the $3500 job.
Only a fool would ceramic coat without performing a paint correction. Even on a brand new car the factory paint has issues. Same goes for the wheels, why coat the vehicle and skip the wheels. The wheels on my Navigator are the most difficult part of cleaning the vehicle, the ceramic coating makes that job amazingly easy. $3500 is what I paid as well and that was the going rate based on the quotes I was getting. I did not opt for the ‘new delivery service’ where the detailer trailers your newly delivered vehicle, which is still covered in the plastic from the factory, to his shop for the work. I wish I had, though.
If you paid $3500 for a just a correction and a ceramic application (including wheels), I think you got taken. :-(
I paid $3500 for correction, ceramic, wheels, tinting and wrapping 50% of my suv from one of the best shops in my state.
Every place has different packages. Like I said the $3500 package I was quoted includedIf you paid $3500 for a just a correction and a ceramic application (including wheels), I think you got taken. :-(
I paid $3500 for correction, ceramic, wheels, tinting and wrapping 50% of my suv from one of the best shops in my state.