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Who offers the closest to the original C bumper trim? I would like to install the new trim on my car rather than cleaning up the old trim. Yea I'm lazy.
Ashley,
If your aluminum trim is straight and original, getting new inserts and sanding and polishing the trim is a good option. If not I have been quite satisfied with my Stoddard/NLA repops. Required a bit of shaping to the bumper's contours but child's play for a guy with your metal skills. Assuming you're doing a street car and not a trailer queen.
Cheers,
Joel
Sanding and polishing imperfections from a B/C deco is not as easy as doing that process on an A and earlier deco. The alloy of the later versions is different and the finish is a bright-dip anodize. That can be redone at the west coasts' King of Trim, but only if you demand originality.
Yes, the repro are like hand grenades and horseshoes...close enough to use IF you go through the trouble of making the ends more like 'original.' There is a kink toward each end that won't be self-contouring and the very end is usually a poor copy of the rounded end of the originals. There is not a good continuation of the groove for the seal-to-paint, so a Dremel and small carbide bit may help. The kink can be massaged out to get the correct contact at the rounded end and wind up looking decent, if not completely 'correct.' The anodize may craze and many other challenges, but still less involvement than a redo of the real deal.
The better decos for the rockers are very good, from Porsche and last I bought any, still a bit under $100.(each)
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