BMW touch up paint does not remotely match!
BMW touch up paint does not remotely match!
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Leicesterdave

Original Poster:

2,288 posts

201 months

Thursday 11th October 2018
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Weird one this- bought this touch up paint from BMW this morning. Car colour is Glacier Silver but the touch up paint colour is blue! I've googled 'glacier silver BMW' in images and the one pic that does come up is that same bluey colour (I've uploaded a pic).

I've tried it on metal- as it definitely looks blue and nothing like silver? What to do!

Pica-Pica

15,868 posts

105 months

Thursday 11th October 2018
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Stir thoroughly?

Kenny Powers

2,618 posts

148 months

Thursday 11th October 2018
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I don’t know about that particular colour, but very often the finished paint colour looks markedly different when the clear coat is applied.

r11co

6,244 posts

251 months

Thursday 11th October 2018
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Had something similar with my Alfa GT. Grigio Sterling was the colour and it looked like a standard silver-grey on the car, but the official touch-up paint (that came in what to all intents and purposes was a nail-varnish bottle) had a blue tinge to it when wet.

At first I was reluctant to use it but tried a small test touch-in and it dried to a perfect match.

Ninja59

3,691 posts

133 months

Thursday 11th October 2018
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How well did you actually shake it?

Touch up colours invariably will always have a degree of difference as even despite being the same name you will have subtle differences between batches and further to this paint can age and take on every so subtly different shades which is why blending in bodyshops is pretty much essential to ensure that the difference in colour is not as noticeable.

That said some colours are far worse - silver, white a few others actually make this problem worse in the bodyshop world.

Combine this with the fact that bumpers and generally plastic exterior equipment will arrive pre painted before the rest of the vehicle, which will have specific tolerances if one body is at the opposite extreme to the bumper despite the tolerance being different the colour can be miles off. It is one reason that in some cases you see brand new cars that have not received any post factory treatment with bumpers miles off the wing and bonnet colour. Obviously numerous cars receive post factory (or even post line) fixing...

Mercury00

4,231 posts

177 months

Thursday 11th October 2018
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Check the paint code on your door with the one on the pot.

Leicesterdave

Original Poster:

2,288 posts

201 months

Thursday 11th October 2018
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Shook it very well and all paint codes match!! I don't get how that is remotely silver!

Kenny Powers

2,618 posts

148 months

Thursday 11th October 2018
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Looks silver on the rim of the bottle. Kinda. I wouldn’t worry. You’re looking at big blobs of it. I imagine thinned out on the car, and clear coated, it will be as good a match as you can hope for with touch up pots.

Squiggs

1,520 posts

176 months

Thursday 11th October 2018
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I'm afraid it won't look silver.
Paints are designed to sprayed and when sprayed the paint hits the surface as a very thin layer …… in this thin layer the metallic/pearl particles in the paint all 'sit' correctly acting as tiny mirrors, reflecting light, thus giving the appearance of silver.
When you touch-in, no matter how careful you are, you apply the paint thicker than if it were sprayed …… in this thick paint the metallic/pearl particles 'sink', they don't sit properly, they can't act like little mirrors can't reflect the light and the paint appears dull/murky/darker.

If you're only touching in small chips then more often than not you can get better results on a silver by simply forgetting that it's silver.
Get a pot of black and a pot of white and mix a paint that matches the same general hue of the car.
The fact that a tiny dot of paint hasn't got any silver in it is a lot less unnoticeable than a dark blob.

Edited by Squiggs on Thursday 11th October 13:49

Mignon

1,018 posts

110 months

Thursday 11th October 2018
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Wipe the brush almost dry on the rim of the pot and apply it in very thin layers a bit at a time and see what happens.

paintman

7,845 posts

211 months

Thursday 11th October 2018
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Your answer is in the post by Squiggs & Mignon's suggestion is worth a try.

I've had a quick look at the mixing scheme I use - Nexa Aquabase + & if your colour has the code WA83 or A83 it shows a total of 10 shades of which 3 are the most common.

In the days when I had anything to do with stonechips the best colour for them on silver cars was Vauxhall Star Silver III, a very bright silver which was usually a very good hider for small chips.
If you're doing anything much bigger than a 1 or at most 2 mm chip then it will be visible.
And for those size chips forget the 3" brush that comes with the touch-in & just dot in a bit of the colour coat with a straightened out paperclip. Far more precise.


Edited by paintman on Thursday 11th October 15:09

Jayzee

2,736 posts

225 months

Saturday 13th October 2018
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As suggested, a straightened paper clip or tooth pick. If you want the flake to “pop” then gently dab it with your finger afterwards. Watch it match the rest of your car before your very eyes.