Wheel paint flaked off, repair options? Photo attached
Wheel paint flaked off, repair options? Photo attached
Author
Discussion

Buggyjam

Original Poster:

539 posts

102 months

Thursday 9th November 2017
quotequote all
Hi.

Gen 2 987.
I've notice some paint flaking off on one spoke of one wheel. The other wheels look immaculate. Can't see how it's happened. Maybe a stone? Looks like more is ready to lift off perhaps with the alu surface corroding. I'd be happy to leave it myself. But I suspect it'll get worse.

I rang a wheel place and they said they don't retouch, only refurbish the whole wheel. I pointed out I don't want one wheel not match the shade of the others. They said they can try and paint match but I said no thanks as their response didn't fill me with confidence.

Question is.

A- can this be retouched? Do you just use a touch up pen?
B- can anyone identify what my wheels are? I think they're cayman S wheels. Do they come in black or will my wheels have been painted after the fact? Just curious. They look lovely anyway (flash makes them look terrible plus they're dirty)

Oh, I know my rear discs need replacing before anyone says smile

Edited by Buggyjam on Thursday 9th November 18:28


Edited by Buggyjam on Thursday 9th November 18:28

Buggyjam

Original Poster:

539 posts

102 months

Thursday 9th November 2017
quotequote all

Redbaron1973

637 posts

276 months

Thursday 9th November 2017
quotequote all
sharpie pen to hide the stone chips. refurb when they get to unlivable with.

xjay1337

15,966 posts

141 months

Thursday 9th November 2017
quotequote all
Yup. Thorough clean and sharpie
Or dab of black paint from a touch up pen.

Buggyjam

Original Poster:

539 posts

102 months

Thursday 9th November 2017
quotequote all
Cheers guys. Sharpie as in permanent marker? Love it, my kind of practical solution biggrin

Any ideas on what my wheels are off? Read they were S wheels. But can't find any on google photos. Just curious if they came in black from factory.




breadvan

2,110 posts

191 months

Thursday 9th November 2017
quotequote all
18-inch Cayman S II wheels. nerd
I’m looking at the Cayman 987.2 brochure and it makes no reference to having them painted black.

Edited by breadvan on Thursday 9th November 21:40

SV_WDC

1,116 posts

112 months

Thursday 9th November 2017
quotequote all
Does a sharpie pen offer any protection to the wheel?

A tyre place suggested this to me when I speculatively asked the best resolution for any marks where you do not want to refurb the whole wheel.

Buggyjam

Original Poster:

539 posts

102 months

Friday 10th November 2017
quotequote all
breadvan said:
18-inch Cayman S II wheels. nerd
I’m looking at the Cayman 987.2 brochure and it makes no reference to having them painted black.

Edited by breadvan on Thursday 9th November 21:40
Thanks breadvan! That's interesting, must have been painted afterwards. They look lush when a flash isn't pointing at them and they're not covered in road grime.

xjay1337

15,966 posts

141 months

Friday 10th November 2017
quotequote all
SV_WDC said:
Does a sharpie pen offer any protection to the wheel?

A tyre place suggested this to me when I speculatively asked the best resolution for any marks where you do not want to refurb the whole wheel.
What do you mean?

It is just a permanent dye which will last for a few weeks at a time and is quick and easy way of hiding severe chips.


If you're asking if you paint the entire wheel with a sharpie can you then smash it into a curb and it be ok, the answer is no.

SV_WDC

1,116 posts

112 months

Friday 10th November 2017
quotequote all
xjay1337 said:
What do you mean?

It is just a permanent dye which will last for a few weeks at a time and is quick and easy way of hiding severe chips.


If you're asking if you paint the entire wheel with a sharpie can you then smash it into a curb and it be ok, the answer is no.
Don't most painted wheels have clear coat, lacqueur etc? i.e. a sharpie will offer little or no protection to the exposed wheel?

xjay1337

15,966 posts

141 months

Friday 10th November 2017
quotequote all
SV_WDC said:
Don't most painted wheels have clear coat, lacqueur etc? i.e. a sharpie will offer little or no protection to the exposed wheel?
Well, yes, but it's a wheel, not a piece of fine art.

Plenty of people have damaged wheels from curbing etc. And they are fine when refurbished.

Buggyjam

Original Poster:

539 posts

102 months

Friday 10th November 2017
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anonymous said:
[redacted]
Cheers cmoose. I'm glad they did paint them as they look gorge in real life (to me). Flash has made them unrecognisable. Glad my eyes don't have a flash laugh

Buggyjam

Original Poster:

539 posts

102 months

Friday 10th November 2017
quotequote all
SV_WDC said:
Don't most painted wheels have clear coat, lacqueur etc? i.e. a sharpie will offer little or no protection to the exposed wheel?
Yeah, I don't think alloy corrosion spreads too much like rust and doesn't penetrate too far so it'll only be the chipped bits that get it on the surface. I'm sure it's absolutely fine after a refurb. My Father was a lorry driver and the running joke with a tyre that had bald spots on a trailer was to take a permanent marker and draw on the tread pattern biggrin.

I've got myself a Halfords gloss touch up stick today and a small art type brush. That'll do. Cheers for help all.

Fl0pp3r

869 posts

226 months

Saturday 11th November 2017
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If/when you do get to the point of needing refurb (and assuming you want to retain the same finish) I'd take them to Lepsons (or admin/collection by Exel Wheels) for the refurb - they are the best especially for bespoke colour matching etc. thumbup

Fl0pp3r

869 posts

226 months

Saturday 11th November 2017
quotequote all
If/when you do get to the point of needing refurb (and assuming you want to retain the same finish) I'd take them to Lepsons (or admin/collection by Exel Wheels) for the refurb - they are the best especially for bespoke colour matching etc. thumbup

Buggyjam

Original Poster:

539 posts

102 months

Saturday 11th November 2017
quotequote all
Fl0pp3r said:
If/when you do get to the point of needing refurb (and assuming you want to retain the same finish) I'd take them to Lepsons (or admin/collection by Exel Wheels) for the refurb - they are the best especially for bespoke colour matching etc. thumbup
Smashing. Thanks for the tip. Def will want to retain the same finish. Where abouts is Lepsons? I've just touched up the chips today with a Halfords nib stick. Seems nice and practical, better than alloy showing. When they need re doing in a couple of years I'll get all 4 done together with fresh black and silver centre caps

Edited by Buggyjam on Saturday 11th November 16:59