Monday, October 26, 2015

That's just not right, Pt 2.

With the hood back on the car, I could finally get started on the important part, the top side(although really since the top is just for decoration while the bottom actually provides the structure, it should be the other way around).  The "repairs" on the top of the hood are another exercise in how not to do things.  Instead of diving right in with my grinder, I used my DA to sand the paint off, exposing the "repairs" in all their "glory."

The first thing I noticed was that this hood has been painted FIVE TIMES.  I don't mean there were five coats of paint on it, there were five distinct base/clear layers.  I know the bumper skin was repainted because it's flaking in places.  I had no idea that the hood it's self had been repainted, much less five times.  All the damage I found was from the crash that wrecked it just before I got it, so I don't know why the hood was painted so many time.  Anyway, lets look at a picture, because you're all really here for the pictures, right?
One pic, lots of trouble...
1.  There is a crack here repaired with fiberglass.  As you can see, the fiberglass is laid OVER the paint.   Paint is not a suitable substrate for fiberglass.  It wasn't properly ground down, and will have adhesion issues.   The whole repair could literally pop off the part because the only thing holding it on is paint.
2.  Cracks filled with bondo.  They didn't even bother to grind out the crack on the right(that's the one we took an in depth look at a few posts back).  It's no wonder it recracked, there is no structure holding the crack together.
3.  Loose/delaminated fiberglass.  We'll take a closer look at this area later on
4.  In a one-two punch, here we have more fiberglass on top of paint, and more crackes just skimmed with bondo.
5.  A crack that was ground a bit, but not completely gone so the crack continued to spread.
6.  Fiberglass laid in without a proper bevel.  These are major cracks and in several areas the only thing the new 'glass is holding onto is the vertical edge of the old 'glass.  In time, these crack would reappear.

Here's a closer look at area 2, where the crack reappeared.  You can see there is nothing holding the cracks together but a bondo bandaid. It's a wonder that it lasted as long as it did before recracking.


Here's an up close look at area 3.  The impact from the crash caused some of the fiberglass to delaminate.  You can see the ragged dark edges towards the center of the pic where some fibers of the top layer of fiberglass broke loose from the rest of the sheet.  They were just skimmed with bondo.  This sort of damage may or may not ever develop into a full crack, but it will definitely cause paint adhesion problems as the broken layer of fiberglass can move independently of the rest of the sheet.  You can also see a myriad of still existing cracks under the fiberglass repair on the left side of the picture.


One more picture, because everyone likes pictures.  Area 4 is basically all the other problem areas combined in one area.  There is just so much wrong in this picture...

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