Just make sure you scan the road you are about to drive down, on foot, for any potential rocks or debris that might hit your paint. Because, you know, it's kind of inevitable.
Somebody hit the drivers door on mine and chipped the paint. Besides a professional fix, any ideas to keep it from getting worse?
I was thinking of a small piece of PPF/clear bra material...
Somebody hit the drivers door on mine and chipped the paint. Besides a professional fix, any ideas to keep it from getting worse?
I was thinking of a small piece of PPF/clear bra material...
I hope Mazda mica blue paint pens are a closer match than the rhodium white paint pens are...but yes use a paint pen to fill it in as quick as possible.
If you can run a fingernail over the scratch, and it catches, it's likely too deep to be polished out. However, if you have the tools and products available, or if you want to try polishing it out by hand, you could give that a try. Just be sure to read up on the process and watch a few YouTube vids to learn before you attempt it. At the very least, you can minimize the look of the chip a little bit. Then, if you don't want to get it professionally repaired, use some clear nail polish and fill in the chip with a tooth pick (do not use the nail brush to "paint" it on). Touch up paint often makes the chip look worse because people tend to apply too much, and because the paint is often not a perfect match.
I recently had to polish out a few marks from an errant shopping cart. I didn't think it would come out, but it worked out really well. I used a DA (dual-action) polisher with a foam pad and Meguiar's Ultimate Polish.