Use the 3m 5887 Ez sand bumper repair for a factory look on your seam sealer. Tape it off just like you did, then use a cut down bondo spreader instead of a brush. Take the tape off quickly and you get a nice edge with no brush marks. The material is almost like a flowable seam sealer but doesn't run everywhere. I also use a Matco pneumatic door skin tool. You don't even have to sand the outside at all, comes out perfect with practice. Great Job!
05887 is amazing BUT requires a primed surface (not supposed to be over bare metal), that's why he uses 08310. He doesn't want to wait on the primer. I would say 99.9% of customers would never even notice that the seam was sealed, much less what what used to seal it. I always use 5887 so I know it's right.
You don't need to wipe the edges at all... door skin hammers are usles... i use an air hammer with flat head and low air to overlap never wipe bondo unless is the sleeve. One hour per door from detrim to paint shop
Panel should always be applied to bare metal the inside of the door skin was not prepped right And Gm wants you to use impact resistant panel bond not standard panel bond
I guess I don’t understand cutting off the window frame? Once you cut it off, aren’t you taking a small amount from the height of the frame and don’t you have to make up that small gap, and how do you reattach it after it’s cut?
Jairo SendsIt usually commission. Body appetence gets paid hourly or commission based on how good he or she is. But by the looks of Kyle he’s most likely commission.
@@panchodharami8594 It doesn't take any more time to use the correct seam sealer to imitate the seam. 3M 05887 is better for this, but you have to prime the metal first, that's why he doesn't use it. It takes more time.