I dropped a board on my month-old paint job that I did myself. Much swearing ensued.
I have some paint left over, so I can paint the whole rear trunk lid. But I need to fix the bent corner and the dent in the middle.
1. Is the corner dent easily fixable by just bending it back? What's the best way to do this?
2. The dent in the middle is right over one of the cross members on the other side. I thought I could drill a hole in it, then tap out the dent. Thoughts?
Thanks!
I feel your pain; I recently had the garage door come down on the front hood.
Fortunately, Hagerty’s covered the whole job...
My advice would be to insure with Hagertys for an agreed value.
For the dent in the middle, maybe try a puller. I got this last week but have not tried it yet.
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Any body work people want to chime in? I'd like to do this myself. The other option is to buy another trunk lid, which I'm working on.
I second the replacement trunk lid idea. If you can find one that is not loaded with bonds and rust you would be ahead fete game especially since your paint job is so fresh and you have left over paint. Don't beat yourself up over the dent, stuff happens.
easy enough to straighten, but because of the cracked paint it will need to be ground to bare metal and body worked then the paint blended. not an easy repair
As much work as it would to prep a replacement lid you could fix that one. Mine had bent corners on both lids, I just bent the edges back to level with the rest of the lid. The one the middle use paint-less dent removal tools. You should able to get them back with a tiny amount of filler. Block the whole thing out and respray the whole lid.
Did you paint this yourself?
If you had a bodyshop paint this I would 100% take it to the shop and have them fix it. They'll fix it MUCH faster than what you can do it and with less headaches. The corner just bend back, but the dent in the middle, boy howdy that is going to be fun..
I took it to a local body shop. They are going to get the dents out and primer it for me. I'll sand and paint it myself. The "stupid tax" was $250 (ouch) and goes to a local business. I painted the whole car myself, so I can sand and paint no problem, but dent repair is an art that takes practice and skills. I was lucky that my car only had very minor scratches and dings in it when I restored it.
Dolly and hammer sets are either cheap garbage or cost as much as having a repair shop do it.
The dents are a bit too deep for me to use a paintless dent removal kit, too. The dents are not just pushed in metal, they are bent and pushed in. The corner of the wood piece is what hit. The piece of oak that did this is now a cup holder and a box.
Smart choice. If you tried to fix it you would have gotten oil canning or just a ton of bodywork/filler.
Be sure you put the same primer color on the car prior to final paint, or else the trunk will be shaded differently.
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