Tuxedo Black paint Closeup with Paint Chip

Disclaimer: Links on this page pointing to Amazon, eBay and other sites may include affiliate code. If you click them and make a purchase, we may earn a small commission.

Joined
Mar 15, 2014
Posts
17
Reaction score
5
Location
Lafayette, LA
I just discovered my first paint chip on my brand new truck. My wife had to come outside to check out who I was fixing to pistol whip because of the F bombs I was dropping. The only cool thing about this whole deal was the picture I took of the "blemish" on my Raptor was the embedded multi-color pigments.

The two white spots are the paint chips...zoom in to see the purple, green, red and who the hell knows what the other colors I can't spell in the paint scheme of Tuxedo Black 2014 SE
niz1.jpg


This is what the truck looks like from about 10 feet, the chip is right below the "R" of the Raptor Graphics
0vhq.jpg



Stupid question, other than the cool visual of the multi-colored black paint, is a paint chip worth fixing or should I just say F it?
 

CP RAPTOR

Full Access Member
Joined
Apr 10, 2013
Posts
767
Reaction score
425
Location
Nova Scotia, Canada
F it if your going to drive it in dirt. Mud flaps on the front will help significantly with chips. I also find often times fixing a small chip will make it stand out much more.
 

AdamsPolishes

Supporting Vendor
Supporting Vendor
Joined
Mar 15, 2013
Posts
3,210
Reaction score
2,342
The Dr. ColorChip system works very well and is what I'd recommend. It often performs much better and yields better results than the pen/brush bottles that you will typically get from dealerships or auto parts stores.

Fixing chips is a good idea, even if you like to bury it in the mud and treat it like a truck. A chip is the easiest place for corrosion to start, and chips always grow, they never shrink. ;)
 

mudblood

FRF Addict
Joined
Nov 11, 2013
Posts
1,429
Reaction score
618
Location
Atlanta
The Dr. ColorChip system works very well and is what I'd recommend. It often performs much better and yields better results than the pen/brush bottles that you will typically get from dealerships or auto parts stores.

Fixing chips is a good idea, even if you like to bury it in the mud and treat it like a truck. A chip is the easiest place for corrosion to start, and chips always grow, they never shrink. ;)

They are great used to use Dr. Colorchip on my vette. :head3:
 
Top