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Wow and that included ceramic as well? I’m also getting 5 year ceramic with my bundle.I had XPEL full front package (hood, headlights, bumper, quarter panels, a pillars, mirrors) with XPEL Tint on the front two windows for $2400 in Metro Detroit less than a year ago, NE prices are probably higher and driving to Detroit and spending 3 days here would eat up any savings you may have from coming to the midwest, I'd say 3300 is fair but not the best price you'll find.
The Amazon stuff is garbage, so there’s that. But yes, if you can get your hands on a good product and have cover available for curing then it is absolutely doable yourself.You guys realize you can apply ceramic yourself for well under $100 right? You literally wipe it on and then wipe it off. I did mine and it was $21 on Amazon and there’s enough product to do it 4 times.
Clean, clay, ceramic on a new car. If your hand is able to go in a back and forth motion you have the necessary skills to do it.
Where in metro detroit did you get that price?I had XPEL full front package (hood, headlights, bumper, quarter panels, a pillars, mirrors) with XPEL Tint on the front two windows for $2400 in Metro Detroit less than a year ago, NE prices are probably higher and driving to Detroit and spending 3 days here would eat up any savings you may have from coming to the midwest, I'd say 3300 is fair but not the best price you'll find.
Two bottles of Avalon King, enough for 3 cars, IPA prep, and a bottle of Ceramic boost maintenance spray was under $100. It’s as good as any pro ceramic and easy to apply. My wife’s Audi got the $1000 cc quartz pro application and my MYP looks just as good if not better.The Amazon stuff is garbage, so there’s that. But yes, if you can get your hands on a good product and have cover available for curing then it is absolutely doable yourself.
Really you tested all of them? A few of the reviews mentions people that do it for a living use the stuff. I can tell you it worked great on my car. Durability has yet to be seen but I have enough for four applications easily. I think the people that do it for a living just try to justify their high prices and it’s a bunch of snake oil. Unfortunately a lot of Tesla owners are not car people so they can barely do anything themselves. So they pay high prices for ppf, ceramic, and wraps.The Amazon stuff is garbage, so there’s that. But yes, if you can get your hands on a good product and have cover available for curing then it is absolutely doable yourself.
The problem with Amazon is it’s become little more than a Chinese flea market. There are some good products, and a lot of cheap crap. The reviews are largely useless, too, because people pay review farms to write good reviews and jack the ratings.Really you tested all of them? A few of the reviews mentions people that do it for a living use the stuff. I can tell you it worked great on my car. Durability has yet to be seen but I have enough for four applications easily. I think the people that do it for a living just try to justify their high prices and it’s a bunch of snake oil. Unfortunately a lot of Tesla owners are not car people so they can barely do anything themselves. So they pay high prices for ppf, ceramic, and wraps.
This is a very accurate description of Amazon lately.The problem with Amazon is it’s become little more than a Chinese flea market. There are some good products, and a lot of cheap crap. The reviews are largely useless, too, because people pay review farms to write food review and jack the ratings.
My understanding is that more than the coating itself the prep is the key and is more than most home DIYers will do themselves. It strikes me like doing an epoxy coat on your garage. You can do it yourself, but the equipment, time and effort are more than most people have and without proper prep the end result is poor.The Amazon stuff is garbage, so there’s that. But yes, if you can get your hands on a good product and have cover available for curing then it is absolutely doable yourself.
Tested plenty of them and yes, all garbage. Talk to me in 6 months and let me know how it’s working. You get what you pay for.Really you tested all of them? A few of the reviews mentions people that do it for a living use the stuff. I can tell you it worked great on my car. Durability has yet to be seen but I have enough for four applications easily. I think the people that do it for a living just try to justify their high prices and it’s a bunch of snake oil. Unfortunately a lot of Tesla owners are not car people so they can barely do anything themselves. So they pay high prices for ppf, ceramic, and wraps.
You really said someone isn’t a car person if they don’t use generic, Amazon, penny-merchant chemicals on their 70k+ car? Weird flex, but ok!Really you tested all of them? A few of the reviews mentions people that do it for a living use the stuff. I can tell you it worked great on my car. Durability has yet to be seen but I have enough for four applications easily. I think the people that do it for a living just try to justify their high prices and it’s a bunch of snake oil. Unfortunately a lot of Tesla owners are not car people so they can barely do anything themselves. So they pay high prices for ppf, ceramic, and wraps.
Yep, far far superior to a lot of the high end things. I applied it myself to my last BMW, got lazy and paid for a professional 5yr coat on my Mach-E. Guess what, my DIY job on the BMW was better, and I don’t think that’s my skill but the product applied.Two bottles of Avalon King, enough for 3 cars, IPA prep, and a bottle of Ceramic boost maintenance spray was under $100. It’s as good as any pro ceramic and easy to apply. My wife’s Audi got the $1000 cc quartz pro application and my MYP looks just as good if not better.
The problem with Amazon is it’s become little more than a Chinese flea market. There are some good products, and a lot of cheap crap. The reviews are largely useless, too, because people pay review farms to write good reviews and jack the ratings.
You really said someone isn’t a car person if they don’t use generic, Amazon, penny-merchant chemicals on their 70k+ car? Weird flex, but ok!
Tested plenty of them and yes, all garbage. Talk to me in 6 months and let me know how it’s working. You get what you pay for.
I’ve owned cars that are well beyond the MYPs price point and would never again let the Amazon junk touch it. To each their own though. If you like it, that’s all that matters.