Mach_Tuck
1000 Posts Club!
A heat gun is fine...IF used properly! Thats a HUGE if by the way.
I had the same thing happen to mine. I have a black Stinger. I am trying to get the paint.I'm in a panic. So I rebadged the back kia badge and removed the back small stinger logo perfectly fine using a hair dryer. But when I went to do the front, I noticed that not even too long into it, I see some paint chips underneath the badge.
So currently I still have the Kia badge left on cus I'm worried the paint chip is huge. It looks like the E badge won't cover some of the chip on the right of it. Wondering if paint pen will help here?
I had the same thing happen to mine. I have a black Stinger. I am trying to get the paint.
Hey new member here. Just picked up a used 2018 gt1. Im glad I found this thread. Just noticed this by the front badge the second day of owning it. I guess the first owner tried to do it himself with a heat gun too.
Welcome, Shy Guy. You include a pic of a ripped sidewall and don't say a thing!? Whoa! That's bad enough to replace, pronto.Yeah thought about picking up a touch up pen but I’m wanting to re-badge it so maybe I’ll just bite the bullet get it done with a body shop and then ceramic coat this bad boy. And yes I know ceramic coating won’t save me from rock chips.
Pick up this gt1 on an awesome deal. Just 13k miles. The last owner was a senator and I guess he got too many speeding tickets and had to sell it. But I’m finding more and more little nicks everyday but idc I came from a 2003 Toyota Camry so I’m loving this car.
Welcome, Shy Guy. You include a pic of a ripped sidewall and don't say a thing!? Whoa! That's bad enough to replace, pronto.
Here's mine: at 150+ MPH would you want to be thinking about "tire cement"? ditto, hard cornering, say pulling close to a G in lateral force? And you hear your treads start to "sing" and the back end breaks a bit and you drift out of the curve. On a tire with cement in the sidewall. Nope.Thanks Merlin. Do you think that type of tear warrants a complete replacement? It hasn’t thrown me any pressure warnings and I can’t see the cords. I had a discount tire shop take a look and they didn’t think it needed replacing. Just picked up tire cement but I’m hesitant to use it. Not trying to have a sidewall blowout on my driver side ya know. Maybe I’ll post in the tire section and get 99 different opinions.
Something is up with the paint on the front. I too had issues with the paint peeling. I even had paint come off when I was using my fingernail to remove some of the glue. Like others I used a hairdryer and plastic wedges. Everything went fine on the back on the car.
IMO, I would take it to the body shop...
You are the second forum member I've seen mess up their paint due to using a heat gun to remove the badges. Looks like people need to avoid them and try installing with just fishing line and plastic tools.
Edit: Nope, I decided to half-ass it as usual, so here it is just slightly off-center, covering my shameful paint scratches.
I used lengths of nylon from a heavy packaging tie-strap (industrial furniture pieces from Costco). No marks on my paint. No heat, ambient temps were around 60º. I used WD40 for lubricant while cutting thru the badge mounting tape, and to remove residue. I think, but can't be sure as it's been so long, I used a plastic trim removal tool to lever some parts away when they were nearly there.
Not claiming to be any kind of expert, just sharing the fact that my Snow White Pearl paint held up just fine, no marks at all under extreme scrutiny - I removed all badges, put a round KDM badge up front, and re-used the small Stinger script (with small strips of 3M VHB) above the license plate on the rear, which covers the holes nicely.
I think what we are witnessing is a change in the chemical composition of automobile paint. Kia or any other manufacturer can "nail down" a process. And when the supplier changes something (to comply with "green" demands or similar), the manufacturer can get blind sided and have to learn to adapt. This is compete supposition on my part, but this theory could explain why we see variability between the plastic and steel areas resulting in different qualities of adherence.You'd think painting plastics should have been pretty nailed down by all manufacturers by now.