Re-Spray
#1
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Re-Spray
Hello, I've been looking at purchasing a 964 for several months. What are your thoughts on a '93 C2 which has been completely re-painted. The seller discloses that it has undergone a windows out re-paint over 10 years ago,,,can you please please given me opinions on how much of a price reduction a complete re-paint might have,,, also please given me honest opinions of appeal,,,,I'm curious to know how many would simply no consider this car? I've looked at '93 - '94 cars in the low to high $70K price range,,,,but considering its has been re-painted? what are your opinions? thank you very much. Afshin.
#2
Three Wheelin'
It depends on the quality of the repaint.
And the mileage.
#4
Original paint is always going to be the best paint. But sometimes road rash and rust makes it impossible to keep it. Its all about quality, I would have a close look before deciding if its a dealbreaker or not.
#6
Formerly turbotwoshoes
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Make sure you use a paint meter when checking out the car. That's the fastest way to determine the cause of the repaint... was it cosmetic or was it to repair a damaged panel. I would like my car repainted in the next year or so just because the paint has outlived its useful life and I have a small rust bublle under the wind shield seal. However, before I repaint it (or have it done) I will document it heavily to show its pre-paint condition.
#7
Best paint and road rash are mutually exclusive things, and I for one would think at this point a high quality re-spray would be the best paint vs. original 30 year old tired paint with road rash etc
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#8
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There is nothing inherently wrong with a quality, glass-out respray, I think. If it is done to cover undisclosed damage, it's of course a problem. All depends on how well the paint job was done. If done right, not a deal breaker.
Just my 2 cents.
Just my 2 cents.
#9
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If we're talking top of the market pricing, in addition to an inspection both in sunlight and with a spotlight, I'd want to see paint meter readings and the paperwork involved in the re-spray... every quality re-spray I've seen is a serious five-figure job, and few are as good as the OEM paint on a well cared-for car.
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Make sure you use a paint meter when checking out the car. That's the fastest way to determine the cause of the repaint... was it cosmetic or was it to repair a damaged panel. I would like my car repainted in the next year or so just because the paint has outlived its useful life and I have a small rust bublle under the wind shield seal. However, before I repaint it (or have it done) I will document it heavily to show its pre-paint condition.
#11
Formerly turbotwoshoes
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When you are measuring the thickness of the paint, it should be close over the entire surface of the car. The tops will generally be thicker and the bottom edge less so since it is more difficult to paint. If you have an area that measures significantly different, you may be measuring body filler. The previous owner that had it painted should have before and after pictures of the car. He/she should also be able to document the reason for the re-paint. Our cars are getting to the age where the paint for a great majority of drivers is getting past its prime in my opinion. Lots of small stone chips etc. A quality repaint does not scare me, a repaint covering up body issues is very expensive in the long run...
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A good repaint is a great added value- would you rather have old 30 year old paint? unless the car was a garage queen barley driven sure thats nice, but if its doing what a P car is intended to do "Drive" then of course it would be nice to have the paint refreshed with a good quality job in the original matching color!
#13
A good repaint is a great added value- would you rather have old 30 year old paint? unless the car was a garage queen barley driven sure thats nice, but if its doing what a P car is intended to do "Drive" then of course it would be nice to have the paint refreshed with a good quality job in the original matching color!
#14
As others have said, fresh paint doesn't necessarily impact on the value. In my view, an extremely well-looked after but higher-mileage car (with a comprehensive history folder and some discerning upgrades) can be just as appealing as a totally original, lower-mileage example. You need to consider the whole proposition, rather than worrying about paint per se.
#15
I'd pay more for a great re-spray. What's the actual point of "all original paint" besides showing the car hasn't been in an accident? "All original paint" isn't worth anything to me personally, just tells me the car wasn't driven or it's in really rough shape. I could see if you're the type to not make any modifications to the car, but most of us like to drive and customize these things.