New 3 Finally Arrives - Enclosed Transport Damage
#16
First congrats! Looks great and nice to have another in Texas.
As to damage--why not name the company. They transported and damaged your car. This is a forum and would be helpful so others maybe don't make the same mistake.
Scratch doesn't look bad, but I would get wha you can out of them. Take it to a good local body shop and get an estimate and double it.
As to damage--why not name the company. They transported and damaged your car. This is a forum and would be helpful so others maybe don't make the same mistake.
Scratch doesn't look bad, but I would get wha you can out of them. Take it to a good local body shop and get an estimate and double it.
#17
Rennlist Member
Firstly, congratulations!
As many have said, mistakes happen, the transporter seems to have acted honorably. I was talking to one of the drivers who transported my car from the port to my dealership and he said that the driver is held responsible by their company for any damage to the car during transport. They are personally penalized financially for a proportion of the cost! I have no idea if that's true but if so, as your driver was honest and admitted fault, I'd cause minimum fuss, get compensated for the repair and move ona.
Just a retouch at a good body shop. I wouldn't want to repaint the entire bumper.
As many have said, mistakes happen, the transporter seems to have acted honorably. I was talking to one of the drivers who transported my car from the port to my dealership and he said that the driver is held responsible by their company for any damage to the car during transport. They are personally penalized financially for a proportion of the cost! I have no idea if that's true but if so, as your driver was honest and admitted fault, I'd cause minimum fuss, get compensated for the repair and move ona.
Just a retouch at a good body shop. I wouldn't want to repaint the entire bumper.
#18
Rennlist Member
Geeze that's minor. I thought I was going to see a picture of a 458 laying on top of your roof. A good bumper guy will make that perfect and you will never see it. Do not paint full bumper. White is by far the easiest color to blend and match. This is a $500 repair. 5k? Are you high?
That said car is damaged goods so I'll offer you 20k below base msrp to take it off your hands. :-)
That said car is damaged goods so I'll offer you 20k below base msrp to take it off your hands. :-)
#19
Addict
Rennlist Member
Rennlist Member
This one is obvious..have them pay for a new bumper and the painting, r&r, etc. Then have the spot repaired and pocket a few grand and be happy.
The spot is small, low, and small.
The spot is small, low, and small.
#20
Nordschleife Master
The spot is small. Ask a local Porsche dealer who they recommend for body work/paint. That is an easy touch up and will be invisible to the naked eye done right. $500.00 tops, probably less.
#21
Race Director
This is a fairly minor repair. There is no way you can order a full newly pre-painted bumper directly from Porsche.
A good body shop should be able to just repair that scrape by itself. No bumper removal or repaint. A good place will touch it up, and polish it smooth to blend in nicely.
The more extreme case - Even if they did paint the bumper (because you weren't happy with the result from above), they would just paint that little bottom section and blend it up a couple inches, and then clear coat the whole bumper. This would require bumper removal and de-badging.
The badges would have to be put back on after. The first option would probably do the trick. They will never re-paint the whole bumper for a small and low scrape because you never get a perfect match going against the other panels.
Either way, you'll get paid for the actual damage repair. Most likely under 1K.
A good body shop should be able to just repair that scrape by itself. No bumper removal or repaint. A good place will touch it up, and polish it smooth to blend in nicely.
The more extreme case - Even if they did paint the bumper (because you weren't happy with the result from above), they would just paint that little bottom section and blend it up a couple inches, and then clear coat the whole bumper. This would require bumper removal and de-badging.
The badges would have to be put back on after. The first option would probably do the trick. They will never re-paint the whole bumper for a small and low scrape because you never get a perfect match going against the other panels.
Either way, you'll get paid for the actual damage repair. Most likely under 1K.
Last edited by STG; 03-23-2015 at 11:53 AM.
#22
Keep the pictures in case it come up when you sell it. Keep it away for the insurance companies so you don't get a car fax. Get the dealers best touch up guy to fix it. Enjoy.
#24
Rennlist Member
First congrats! Looks great and nice to have another in Texas. As to damage--why not name the company. They transported and damaged your car. This is a forum and would be helpful so others maybe don't make the same mistake. Scratch doesn't look bad, but I would get wha you can out of them. Take it to a good local body shop and get an estimate and double it.
#25
Rennlist Member
They admitted fault. Mistakes happen. Why screw them over even more for personal benefit? The damage is not great in surface area and is low. Getting a new bumper repainted is risky as it may not match the rest of the car even if done at Porsche authorized shop. Take it to a Porsche authorized repair shop and get an estimate. Have them pay for that. Keep it off carfax by avoiding insurance companies. Then, enjoy your fine car.
#26
Point is if the damage is $500, I'd ask for $1000 from because of time, effort, rental car, etc. Not saying take them to the cleaners
And yes, as to transport company, I would let Renn's know so they can make an informed decision if they want to use that company or not.
And yes, as to transport company, I would let Renn's know so they can make an informed decision if they want to use that company or not.
#27
Good American answer. Sheesh.
They admitted fault. Mistakes happen. Why screw them over even more for personal benefit? The damage is not great in surface area and is low. Getting a new bumper repainted is risky as it may not match the rest of the car even if done at Porsche authorized shop. Take it to a Porsche authorized repair shop and get an estimate. Have them pay for that. Keep it off carfax by avoiding insurance companies. Then, enjoy your fine car.
They admitted fault. Mistakes happen. Why screw them over even more for personal benefit? The damage is not great in surface area and is low. Getting a new bumper repainted is risky as it may not match the rest of the car even if done at Porsche authorized shop. Take it to a Porsche authorized repair shop and get an estimate. Have them pay for that. Keep it off carfax by avoiding insurance companies. Then, enjoy your fine car.
#28
Sorry to hear about your issue.
I would do one of two things
1) Have dealers touch up guy do JUST that spot. The really good ones use an airbrush to "fog" in the area. You will never be able to tell.
2) Demand a new factory bumper. Have them order it from Porsche or (maybe) find a perfect used one from junk yard (ie front end crash).
Personally I would do #1 so the numbers match (panels have ID).
Good luck and enjoy the car
Bill
I would do one of two things
1) Have dealers touch up guy do JUST that spot. The really good ones use an airbrush to "fog" in the area. You will never be able to tell.
2) Demand a new factory bumper. Have them order it from Porsche or (maybe) find a perfect used one from junk yard (ie front end crash).
Personally I would do #1 so the numbers match (panels have ID).
Good luck and enjoy the car
Bill
#29
Sorry to hear about your issue.
I would do one of two things
1) Have dealers touch up guy do JUST that spot. The really good ones use an airbrush to "fog" in the area. You will never be able to tell.
2) Demand a new factory bumper. Have them order it from Porsche or (maybe) find a perfect used one from junk yard (ie front end crash).
Personally I would do #1 so the numbers match (panels have ID).
Good luck and enjoy the car
Bill
I would do one of two things
1) Have dealers touch up guy do JUST that spot. The really good ones use an airbrush to "fog" in the area. You will never be able to tell.
2) Demand a new factory bumper. Have them order it from Porsche or (maybe) find a perfect used one from junk yard (ie front end crash).
Personally I would do #1 so the numbers match (panels have ID).
Good luck and enjoy the car
Bill
#30
Addict
Rennlist Member
Rennlist Member
Good American answer. Sheesh.
They admitted fault. Mistakes happen. Why screw them over even more for personal benefit? The damage is not great in surface area and is low. Getting a new bumper repainted is risky as it may not match the rest of the car even if done at Porsche authorized shop. Take it to a Porsche authorized repair shop and get an estimate. Have them pay for that. Keep it off carfax by avoiding insurance companies. Then, enjoy your fine car.
They admitted fault. Mistakes happen. Why screw them over even more for personal benefit? The damage is not great in surface area and is low. Getting a new bumper repainted is risky as it may not match the rest of the car even if done at Porsche authorized shop. Take it to a Porsche authorized repair shop and get an estimate. Have them pay for that. Keep it off carfax by avoiding insurance companies. Then, enjoy your fine car.
They damaged a part that's easily removable and replaceable. They have insurance. I see no reason that the claim shouldn't be for the part, r&r and painting. Its a new car and this is what he's entitled to. Now, to make the OP feel better, I thought he might come to grips with the deal, paint the spot, hope the repair is perfect and put a few $$ in his pocket....