PPF Experts Help Please!!!
#1
Rennlist Member
Thread Starter
PPF Experts Help Please!!!
Picking up my new GTS tomorrow at PECLA (so excited). I am going to be doing PPF (front half) and ceramic on it (along with tint). I have narrowed it down to two shops in town. Prices are fairly similar. Product is different. One is CeramicPro and one is all XPEL. It appears the XPEL guys use precut but in talking with him he said the precut is so good now you do not see any edges. Neither remove the bumper but both remove the lights.
Any suggestions on which way to go? As I said the price is very similar...
Any suggestions on which way to go? As I said the price is very similar...
#2
My guy uses ceramic pro. One reason I don't see edges is that the hood and any other panels that they can, they wrap the PPF around so it finished on the back side. I wouldn't hire someone that didn't do this.
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johny221 (07-22-2023)
#3
I’d avoid having the headlights removed as it increases the chance of accidental damage.
#4
RL Community Team
Rennlist Member
Rennlist Member
Everyone uses pre-cut.
There's just different levels of precut.
No one is wrapping a car, or even panels of a car, with simply one long blank sheet of PPF.
They all punch in the make, model, and year in the computer and, poof, out pops a "precut" silhouette of the body panel in question and then the detailer resizes and trims it down to fit the car in question.
As to which way to go, look at their prior work, look at some of the cars in their shop, and maybe if you have the time, ask to watch their installers at work (at least for 15-20 minutes, if not longer). That's the best way to tell who is "better" of the two.
With PPF, buy the installer, not the product.
There's just different levels of precut.
No one is wrapping a car, or even panels of a car, with simply one long blank sheet of PPF.
They all punch in the make, model, and year in the computer and, poof, out pops a "precut" silhouette of the body panel in question and then the detailer resizes and trims it down to fit the car in question.
As to which way to go, look at their prior work, look at some of the cars in their shop, and maybe if you have the time, ask to watch their installers at work (at least for 15-20 minutes, if not longer). That's the best way to tell who is "better" of the two.
With PPF, buy the installer, not the product.
The following 3 users liked this post by ipse dixit:
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slwong23 (07-20-2023)
#6
Burning Brakes
Xpel is like the Starbucks of PPF these days. So many better options
#7
Instructor
Everyone uses pre-cut.
There's just different levels of precut.
No one is wrapping a car, or even panels of a car, with simply one long blank sheet of PPF.
They all punch in the make, model, and year in the computer and, poof, out pops a "precut" silhouette of the body panel in question and then the detailer resizes and trims it down to fit the car in question.
As to which way to go, look at their prior work, look at some of the cars in their shop, and maybe if you have the time, ask to watch their installers at work (at least for 15-20 minutes, if not longer). That's the best way to tell who is "better" of the two.
With PPF, buy the installer, not the product.
There's just different levels of precut.
No one is wrapping a car, or even panels of a car, with simply one long blank sheet of PPF.
They all punch in the make, model, and year in the computer and, poof, out pops a "precut" silhouette of the body panel in question and then the detailer resizes and trims it down to fit the car in question.
As to which way to go, look at their prior work, look at some of the cars in their shop, and maybe if you have the time, ask to watch their installers at work (at least for 15-20 minutes, if not longer). That's the best way to tell who is "better" of the two.
With PPF, buy the installer, not the product.
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#8
Rennlist Member
Thread Starter
Everyone uses pre-cut.
There's just different levels of precut.
No one is wrapping a car, or even panels of a car, with simply one long blank sheet of PPF.
They all punch in the make, model, and year in the computer and, poof, out pops a "precut" silhouette of the body panel in question and then the detailer resizes and trims it down to fit the car in question.
As to which way to go, look at their prior work, look at some of the cars in their shop, and maybe if you have the time, ask to watch their installers at work (at least for 15-20 minutes, if not longer). That's the best way to tell who is "better" of the two.
With PPF, buy the installer, not the product.
There's just different levels of precut.
No one is wrapping a car, or even panels of a car, with simply one long blank sheet of PPF.
They all punch in the make, model, and year in the computer and, poof, out pops a "precut" silhouette of the body panel in question and then the detailer resizes and trims it down to fit the car in question.
As to which way to go, look at their prior work, look at some of the cars in their shop, and maybe if you have the time, ask to watch their installers at work (at least for 15-20 minutes, if not longer). That's the best way to tell who is "better" of the two.
With PPF, buy the installer, not the product.
#9
Rennlist Member
Interested to know which shops you are considering as well.
I've had CeramicPro on my C2 for a little over 3 years, it still looks great and cleans up nicely. I don't have any experience with XPEL's competing ceramic product. I also wouldn't worry about the removal of the headlights assuming you have a competent installer.
I've had CeramicPro on my C2 for a little over 3 years, it still looks great and cleans up nicely. I don't have any experience with XPEL's competing ceramic product. I also wouldn't worry about the removal of the headlights assuming you have a competent installer.
#10
Removal of headlights really isn't a big deal. Neither is removal of the bumper. Both are modular and come out with relative ease after undoing some screws. Always select by installer. Look at examples of their finished work product which should have nearly no visible edge, gaps, or seams.
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Go Bruins (07-22-2023)
#12
Race Car
Everyone uses pre-cut.
There's just different levels of precut.
No one is wrapping a car, or even panels of a car, with simply one long blank sheet of PPF.
They all punch in the make, model, and year in the computer and, poof, out pops a "precut" silhouette of the body panel in question and then the detailer resizes and trims it down to fit the car in question.
There's just different levels of precut.
No one is wrapping a car, or even panels of a car, with simply one long blank sheet of PPF.
They all punch in the make, model, and year in the computer and, poof, out pops a "precut" silhouette of the body panel in question and then the detailer resizes and trims it down to fit the car in question.
And certainly not true given my experience with Wilson and the Boys at Premier in Fremont, California applying Prestige Clear Guard Alpha on my '23 GT3 Touring.
He doesnt do "pre-cut". Not even close to being "pre-cut".
Their work is flawless.
Last edited by Diablo Dude; 07-22-2023 at 01:03 AM.
#13
Race Car
Impeccable craftsmanship.
No seams. Mirrors are one piece. Even the F8 Spider above which most shops use 3 pieces on.
No seams. Mirrors are one piece. Even the F8 Spider above which most shops use 3 pieces on.
Last edited by Diablo Dude; 07-22-2023 at 01:13 AM.
#14
Race Car
I had Prestige Clear Guard Nano on my 981 GT4 and I got the latest "Alpha" version on my '23 GT3 Touring.
Premier has worked on so many 992 GT3's and other Porsches that they can spot port damage and other imperfections in a heartbeat.
They've also done a ton of McLaren's, Ferrari's, and Lambo's.
My invoice for ClearGuard Alpha on everything except the rear bumper (including paint correction) was $9,845.00 before taxes.
I also had my wheels and calipers ceramic coated with Nanolex Si3d HD.
And my windows tinted at 45% with Spectra Photosyn IRD.
Hope this helps you.
Feel free to PM me for an invoice.
Last edited by Diablo Dude; 07-22-2023 at 01:14 AM.