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- Location
- Houston, TX
knowing a good pdr guy is crucial with our fx's.. so many dings with the smooth body.
What was the cost? I usually pay between $60 - $100 to remove all of my dents.
I have a small ding on the front driver side door. It just happened this Monday. I'm thinking of getting a paintless ding removal. The ding is about 3" away from the door hinge area. How would they get to it? I don't want them to drill holes on the side of the door to get to it. Has anyone seen how these guys do it and reach the area that I'm interested in? Also, what do you guys think about this dry ice business? I'm a little afraid to try it because I hate to damage my paint to remove a small ding.
If your ding is around the same area as my ding then they basically go through from the window channels and there is a plug for a hole on the side of the door where they gain access as well, the only place they would need to drill a hole is if its on the roof pillar since there isnt a way to get access to that area.
waiting for Atom to chime in & say that a block of dry ice will work & remove the ding to a flawless finish lol.
cant tell if your joking or being serious. please forgive me for not being a morning person.THATS what i said haha
im telling u it's so easy and it works...i took out 2 dings and one dent on my hood using dry ice...i got a block for like 5 dollars (a big one) and used it for all of them all u need is to either apply masking tape over the dent or wax paper
cant tell if your joking or being serious. please forgive me for not being a morning person.
haha im completely serious...i commented it like a couple posts back but no one payed attention lmao
i did it my self on my FX this past weekend
dry ice works in some cases... what it does is cause the metal to contract, which is the opposite of stretch, which is what a dent really is, a stretched out spot in an otherwise flat panel. it doesn't always work but when it does it's wild to see... it tightens up the metal & pulls it taught which makes it straight, once it pulls itself straight then it stays that way as it returns to ambient temp...
---------- Post added at 03:54 PM ---------- Previous post was at 03:44 PM ----------
if it's a deep dent then try to break the dry ice in a way that there is a point or protrusion to stick into the heart of the dent & freeze the center of it as well as the perimeter for a better chance of it being effective.
The Dry ice worked for me...i can't comment on a black car cause mine is sliver...im assuming it would work but i can't say 100%
For the DIY it's really simple...I just took some wax paper and taped it to the car on the dent...then i took the dry ice (obv w/ gloves on) and rubbed it slowly in circles over the dent going clockwise and then counter clockwise for about 15 min then the metal got so cold that it contracted and the dent popped out.
I got the dry ice from Rockland County which is about 30 min from the city...you won't find it in a supermarket..it has to be at a compressed gas place. That is where i got mine from.
This has been discussed before and someone else did it. I know I saw at least one or two videos about how to do it. I think one involved using a heat gun before or after.
This might help find where to buy it. http://www.dryicedirectory.com/usa.htm