Thinking of painting my dune runner (with shelbiette hood) black, but warm summer days will make it one hot body. How many people paint theirs black and do you regret it? Also anybody with info of dune runner bodys, I am looking for photocopies or originals of all ads etc. thanks
Dont forget that black shows flaws more readily,as well as surface scratches, etc. Lighter colors show less. Had a olds Cutlas that was black,took to a comercial car wash with brushes, man did I regret that.
[QUOTE="joemama"]Dont forget that black shows flaws more readily,as well as surface scratches, etc. Lighter colors show less. Had a olds Cutlas that was black,took to a comercial car wash with brushes, man did I regret that.[/QUOTE] You might make the Guiness Book of Records if you drive a buggy through one of those things
I think black is a mistake. It shows EVERYTHING. I had a black blazer. I washed it like every day trying to keep it clean. Even then the slightest ding would shine from 10' away. I finally gave up and just let the car "be dirty". No more black cars for me...
ditto the no way black... i have 2 black cars!! looks great if you work on them all the time.. but.. never again for me. i live with 800 thousand uninsured border bandits who don't care about my car. it has ding all over it and it shows up big time.. only cost about 500 a year to remove them.. my last buy was white!!!
[QUOTE="onelowzuki"]Thinking of painting my dune runner (with shelbiette hood) ........... I am looking for photocopies or originals of all ads etc. thanks[/QUOTE] ALRIGHT! I love it when people know what they have! That rocks. If you inetrested in price sheets or a full color brochure on the Dune Runner, send me a PM. john
Stay away from black...Plastic body = static electricity. Static electricity attracts dust. Dust will be everpresent on your buggy and black will help you see it.
Thanks, those are the thoughts i was having, I just wanted to verify them though. Now I got to figure out what would look good with everything I powdercoated black (including headlight buckets)
Have you noticed that the black paint of VIP limos, especially cars like the Queen's Rolls Royces or Daimlers gleam and show no scratches or marks? The secret is beer. If you polish a black car with beer you will fill all of the scratches with the beery sugar which has the same refractive index as the paint, so all of the scratches disappear. Polished sugar has a gleam all of its own which no other material can improve on. The only problem is that the car must be constantly polished, which is why so many limo drivers are always wiping down the cars as they wait for the VIPs. The other problem is that every time it rains you have to wash the car off and start again, but then limo drivers have nothing else to do.
Here is a pic of mine taken last summer, I bought it about 12 years ago, had it for a couple years (did nothing with it) and I made my dad mad and he gave it away, last summer my wife bought it back for my birthday
Here is what it looked like when I got it back, with no floors, a dead 40 horse, All it was worth actually was the title and more importantly my teenage dream of cruising in it.