Комментарии:
# 6
ОтветитьHowdy Brent! I see your dentures haven’t fallen out yet! Did you steal that shirt from my work?
ОтветитьDangit I’m second 😳
ОтветитьYou know I’m just stirring it up in here hahaha!
ОтветитьExcellent video!
Ответитьgood work thank you for the vid
ОтветитьThank you for the tips on corners, i will practice some of this methods that i havent use and see how they come out 👍
ОтветитьDo you typically leave it 1/8 or so hangover so you can trim and seal exactly how you want at the 2 weeks checkup?
Ответить2 Nd one is the best, no question about
Ответить2 and 6 is my go-to !
ОтветитьÀ question : à ppf can stick on another ppf ? Can we stick one on another one…
And second question : my bumper has two parts and there is no Space between thé two parts… can I pull one unique ppf part or must I have to install to ppf separate parts ?
Thanks for you help 👍🙂
I looked at the temperature on your heat gun and went wtf how hot, then realized your American so its probably Fahrenheit lol
as for the corner i usually do the first one
What tool do you use to wrap hard to get into corners, I see you are using a hard card with something on the end of it ,do it wrap all the way around ?
Ответитьyour video is very helpful. one question. should ppf on the edge of hood be dried before wrapping? why do you not use soapy or alchohol mixed water to that area?
ОтветитьFantastic video. You are the first guy I have seen who shows how to do corners.
So, you leave the corners for last?
You wait for everything to dry?
You did not need to use any tac solution. Interesting!
My idea is #5 would be easier for a beginner.
Ответитьall these are fine imo, I've done most of them or use different techniques depending on the hood. Generally I try to do number 3 whenever possible, except I wrap it to the edge, trim it and then torch it.
ОтветитьA good technique I found was to give the material a tug and hook it on the corner. The tug makes the material naturally bend underneath and then you can cut some excess off and maybe a slit
ОтветитьCombining corner #1 and #2 leaving just enough excess material for the corner to wrap around and under is the best aesthetically just takes a bit more time for the corner to dry to be able to heat and mold.
ОтветитьI used to do the V cut. I will be using your #6 from now on, it makes for sense.
ОтветитьThis is so real
ОтветитьWich one is the best way?
ОтветитьI use the lighter technique 🔥🔥
ОтветитьTbh number 2 is probably the safest too, as it melts together and gets harder, probably even hard to pull the ppf off too when the time comes 😂
ОтветитьI like the v cut...
ОтветитьKeep it up brother 👌
ОтветитьFirst or last
ОтветитьAlways funny when the sales people for these film companies who've never installed a single piece of film come in & try to tell you what to do & not do.
ОтветитьDo u use the heat gun over still semi wet PPF? Just got PPF on new car and there were so many imperfections like bubbles and loose edges. My installers said bubbles is normal, it will go away after 3 weeks. The car will be washed and heat gun can then be use to stick all the loose films. Im skeptical now since the PPF installation here is seemless. Anyone care to tell me if this is supposed to happen?
ОтветитьWondering why pre-cut patterns always leave the corners slightly exposed when you can do that.
ОтветитьDont you hate when some rep guy whos a know it all comes and tells you how to do your job? Lol
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