FL5Frank
Senior Member
- First Name
- Frank
- Joined
- May 12, 2024
- Threads
- 7
- Messages
- 96
- Reaction score
- 86
- Location
- Los Angeles
- Vehicle(s)
- 2024 FL5 Type R
Look at it now, I bet it’s already gapped and you can see the insidesYou think?
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Look at it now, I bet it’s already gapped and you can see the insidesYou think?
I concur. A customer is a customer and a car is a car. They should treat every car like it's a Lambo.I mean it doesn’t matter what car it is, Mazda cx5 or a Ferrari, both customers pay same price and deserve the same quality of work. Unless the shops charge more money for a Ferrari or a civic type r![]()
I disagree on the price. I spoke to multiple other shops in the area and their full front price was comparable. I then added the sides, rear bumper trim, pillars, and vinyl roof. The full car was the ceramic coated.Yeah- after seeing the pics I'm not optimistic this shop is capable of delivering a satisfactory resolution. And you paid over market value for it too.
You seem to be implying they are a dealer- I would not expect a dealer to be able to do an adequate PPF install. The only quality PPF installs I've seen come from shops that specialize in detailing type of work- or ONLY install PPF.
I hope for the best, kind of interested in how all this plays out.
Yeah that is a lot more than fenders, hood, and bumper. Fair price, I agree. Hopefully they come through on the quality.I disagree on the price. I spoke to multiple other shops in the area and their full front price was comparable. I then added the sides, rear bumper trim, pillars, and vinyl roof. The full car was the ceramic coated.
It is a dealership, but they have a dedicated department focused on PPF, wrapping, and ceramic coating. They have certified PPF installers. Unfortunately, their environment, right now, is not ideal. I was not aware until they had already done it. Hence, why they are working on it again this Saturday to improve the environment for the install.
That, my friend, is a ripoff.with ceramic coating that is actually an excellent deal, ceramic alone (with wheels), in NY is 1200-1500.
Yeah that is a lot more than fenders, hood, and bumper. Fair price, I agree. Hopefully they come through on the quality.
That, my friend, is a ripoff.
Buy yourself a bottle of this for $180 and do it yourself on a pleasant evening in your garage or driveway. There are several options out there but I've used the old Reflex Pro on several cars and been very pleased, but finally got around to using the new formula and it has yielded astonishing results- and is virtually as easy to apply as wax.
With all due respect, those are talking points from someone trying to sell you something. The professional ceramic coating game is 100% a scam. You only need to spend an inordinate amount of time paint correcting a car under the following circumstances: 1) the paint is in very poor condition; 2) you're preparing the car for The Pebble Beach Concours d'Elegance. A brand new car will always have some paint issues, but it's rarely disheveled. In nearly all cases, you don't need to spend 8-12 hours paint correcting a brand new car. A Stage I polish is usually sufficient and all you need is a consumer grade coating (e.g., GTechniq, GYEON, CARPRO). I promise it will perform well relative to the professional grade versions.the work of cermic coat is not on the coating application but on the polishing. The price I said is to get your car paint corrected and then ceramic coating applied. A proper paint correction takes many hours and that is what you are paying for.
I did the ceramic coating of all my wheels and its not that hard but I just don't want to spend hours paint correcting and don't have a garage which I recommend for both paint correction and ceramic.
Cars nowadays do have pretty poor paint quality and need a good paint correction, specially some colors. I mean even a minor paint correction if done properly will take time. Say 4 hours and then a couple of hours for ceramic coating, probably longer if you also do wheels and calipers. But lets 8 hours, thats 187/hour. There is also materials. Its not cheap and I won't deny that its maybe more expensive than it should but if the detailer is putting in the time I can see why it costs so much. I have only got it done once and paid $1000 without wheels, car was used and paint needed some love.With all due respect, those are talking points from someone trying to sell you something. The professional ceramic coating game is 100% a scam. You only need to spend an inordinate amount of time paint correcting a car under the following circumstances: 1) the paint is in very poor condition; 2) you're preparing the car for The Pebble Beach Concours d'Elegance. A brand new car will always have some paint issues, but it's rarely far from disheveled. In nearly all cases, you don't need to spend 8-12 hours paint correcting a brand new car. A Stage I polish is usually sufficient and all you need is a consumer grade coating (e.g., GTechniq, GYEON, CARPRO). I promise it will perform well relative to the professional grade versions.
Wild people are still willing to pay high rates for a ceramic coating. Years ago it was understandable because there were no other options and information was scant, but that's not the case today.