Plasti Dip Advice Whole Truck
My intentions are to be temporary with a matte clear coat over it until I finish working on the truck all together and get the whole thing done in line x, probably in a year or two, so just want it to last till then. I don't intend on reselling the truck. Plans are to finish exterior this year (only because of the wreck it was in) then a possible hemi swap or just super charger next year.
Ok, here's what I don't understand. What exactly is the appeal of the Plasti-Dip over regular paint? I'm guessing it's the rubbery feel and the matte finish. But if you clear coat it, both of those are gone and you essentially have black paint. So why not just use matte black paint? I'm sure it would be more durable, too.
If its left uncleared, Its more durable then paint in term of you cant scratch it as easy and its easy to repair a chip or tear, Very easy and cheap.
My intentions are to be temporary with a matte clear coat over it until I finish working on the truck all together and get the whole thing done in line x, probably in a year or two, so just want it to last till then. I don't intend on reselling the truck. Plans are to finish exterior this year (only because of the wreck it was in) then a possible hemi swap or just super charger next year.
When I cleared a test panel (junk fender from hitting a deer...) the enamel clear was pliable enough to pull up in very large chunks. (8-10 inch chunks.)
The advantage to clearing over a dipped car, vs doing a rat rod style matte finish is that the dip self levels. the finish isnt nearly as smooth as paint, but it will hide small dings and scratches without needing to sand/bondo the affected area.
its just a band-aid. Tractor supply sells gallons of flat black paint for around 45 bucks... combine that with a cheap HVLP and a lot of sanding and you could have yourself a very rat rot looking paint job for around 200 bucks and a lot of elbow grease.
The advantage to clearing over a dipped car, vs doing a rat rod style matte finish is that the dip self levels. the finish isnt nearly as smooth as paint, but it will hide small dings and scratches without needing to sand/bondo the affected area.
its just a band-aid. Tractor supply sells gallons of flat black paint for around 45 bucks... combine that with a cheap HVLP and a lot of sanding and you could have yourself a very rat rot looking paint job for around 200 bucks and a lot of elbow grease.
THIS!!!! Trust me. It doesnt come off easy at all when you clear/paint over it...





