Clear bra quotes
I am getting the clear bra work quoted.
So far two quotes back. This is one of them: XPEL Ultimate PPF (Performance Package): $2,795 Coverage: Front Bumper, Full Hood, Full Fenders, Headlights, Mirrors, Rocker Panels, A-Pillars, Behind Rear Wheels XPEL Ultimate PPF (Full Front): $1,995 Coverage: Front Bumper, Full Hood, Full Fenders, Headlights, Mirrors XPEL Ultimate PPF (Partial Plus): $1,495 Coverage: Front Bumper, Full Hood, Partial Fenders, Headlights, Mirrors If you prefer some individual/popular add-on options: XPEL Ultimate PPF (Rocker Panels Only): $495 XPEL Ultimate PPF (B-Pillars): $200 (All 4) XPEL Ultimate PPF (Behind Rear Wheels Only): $200 (Both Sides) I am amazed by how expensive it is. The other quote for the work in bold was $1900, so not far off. For the rocker panels and rear arches they wanted $500. I'm thinking of the work in Bold plus rear arches at $200. Thoughts? Partial fenders saves $500 so I am considering that as well. |
Are you mentally prepared to have it redone every few years?
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Did you look at my Boxster when you were in Maryland a couple years ago? The clearbra on that is about six years old and still looks fantastic. The only places were it's not great are at the openings in the front bumper. Some of the edges have pulled up a little bit and have gotten dirty. The solution is to just trim it back to remove the dirty edge. I did that install myself and I'm not an experienced installer by any means... the only reason those edges lifted is I suck at installing and didn't get the right stretch to the film around the openings. Tight radii are still a bitch when it comes to film adhesion. I did a light machine polish on the whole car a couple months ago when I did the Gyeon ceramic application and I was amazed at how well the film took a shine. It's not discolored or cloudy in the slightest.
The stuff I used was the first iteration of the "self-healing" film and it's done a great job. I also have it on the Mazdaspeed (though that was a professional installation). It's five years old and looks great. The Boxster is garaged when at home. The Mazdaspeed lives outside. For a car that stays garaged, you should certainly be able to get, well, more than six years out of an install. The pre-~2011, 2012 stuff? Not nearly as long-lived. edit: Obviously if the car takes any big stone hits that completely break through the film, you're going to see it. The only "add-ons" I wish I had done were the rear wheel arches, the edge that is exposed to road debris being thrown up by the tire. I regret not doing that on the Boxster. |
My boxster clear bra is over 7 years old and continues to look fantastic. Car was almost never parked outside.
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I guess they are a lot better than they used to be. The last time I did one, it looked horrible ~ 2 years in.
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I'd be more worried on a white car. but I suspect that an orange car will take a slight discoloring well.
I'm tempted to give it a go on my own since I am pretty good at that sort of thing, but I just don't have the time to agonize over it. My new commute is 45+ miles a day of highway. I'm afraid the M3 would get its ass kicked pretty quickly in that environment, so I feel I need to do this. |
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https://www.qcarcare.com/clear-bra (scroll down a bit) |
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We had the front on our Yukon done a couple of weeks after we bought it.
Lasted 12 to 14 years as I recall. It was Xpel as well - I don't recall the specific film the guy used. I would do it again - absolutely. Pricey as it is/was. I have the front foot of the F250's hood as well covered. If the front of the E9 was a candidate for this treatment, I would do that as well. Also - the previous owner of my 997 had the entire front trunk hood and the fenders (all the way to the door/windscreen) covered a couple of years before I bought the car. Still looks great (with 140k on that car now). |
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