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Try driving passed one of these without getting distracted:It would allso be nice if it could start to change folor in one end ( front ) and then slowly move toward the rear of the car, or maybe the same up/down on the car,,,, or both
It was expensive when it first came out but now it is reasonably cheap, you can even buy diy touchup spray cans of the standard MG colours and they are surprisingly easy to paint decently, although a bodyshop would still try to charge you vastly more to do it even though they are painted in the same way as standard paint, just need a bit more care with the base layers and amount applied.He said it could be challenging to apply properly and was outrageously, prohibitively expensive for most applications.
I think a litre of paint is enough for a whole car with some to spare, part of the colour you see comes through from the base coat which is plain cheap paint, the special stuff is only a single fairly thin coat, doesn't work so well if you put too much on, and then there is a standard clear coat on top which you want a decent thickness of.When it was first introduced a kilo of the powder went for $6,400 per kilogram compared with less than 300 for common pigment. Apparently now you can buy a litre of the paint for around £250-350 which still seems pretty dear. Still, I'm glad to hear that the price has come down to where it might be reasonable to consider it for the right project. I think I'd rather see it on other people's vehicles though.
I think a litre of paint is enough for a whole car with some to spare, part of the colour you see comes through from the base coat which is plain cheap paint, the special stuff is only a single fairly thin coat, doesn't work so well if you put too much on, and then there is a standard clear coat on top which you want a decent thickness of.
😀Talk about distracted driving! Who needs texting?! 😀
The stuff used by the car manufacturers has the same particle size as standard pearlescent/metallic paint so that it can be applied using standard equipment/robots. Paints for customisation can have huge particles, makes them more glittery but doesn't give a bigger flip effect.Thanks, I know how cars get painted. Actually, from what I was shown, ChromaFlair is applied thicker than many coatings to allow for the depth the prismatic effect requires. Even though ChromaFlair has dropped in price it still makes for an expensive paint job.
The stuff used by the car manufacturers has the same particle size as standard pearlescent/metallic paint so that it can be applied using standard equipment/robots. Paints for customisation can have huge particles, makes them more glittery but doesn't give a bigger flip effect.