Plastic Welding / Bumper Shaving
Hey whats up guys. I tried doing a Google search but didn't find that very helpful. I want to learn how to shave the front bump on my del Sol. And I want to make it as OEMish as possible (as far as quality goes). I want to go from this....

to this

So this would require me shaving the aux holes, the license plate holes, the bumper reflectors and while I am at it I want to mold on my lip. So I was looking for tips on what products to use and how to go about it.
-Mark-

to this

So this would require me shaving the aux holes, the license plate holes, the bumper reflectors and while I am at it I want to mold on my lip. So I was looking for tips on what products to use and how to go about it.
-Mark-
Yea I know that but the bumper still has the reflector lights and the license plate lights and the bumpers cause they are rare go for around $150 used and $250 new. Since this looks different and I am pretty sure could be done cheaper I was leaning towards this way.
..i dont know if you noticed this, but the grill opening is also different between those 2 bumpers. i would NOT recomend shaving those aux light holes, just get the bumper that doesnt have them and shave the rest. it will NEVER last patching a hole that large, plastic welded or not. i ESPECIALLY wouldnt recommend this as a first plastic welding project. as soon as you tap something with that it will crack. the license plate holes and bummper lenses will be easier to do, and should last, but imho those aux light holes are way too big for a proper repair. think of it this way....even if it looks good when your finished, you get it painted. when it cracks, you have to get a new bumper and have it shaved and painted anyway. sell the bumper you have and get the right one to start with. spend the extra money now and save the hassle of having to do this twice.
also...the jdm del sol bumpers come with no bumper reflectors, maybe you can find a jdm sol bumper with no aux lights, and no reflectors and only have to shave the license plate holes.
EDIT:: "done cheaper" and "done correctly" are often NOT THE SAME. aftermarket bumpers can be had for half the price of an oem, but almost never fit correctly. as they say, you get what you pay for, if honda made a bumper thats almost teh way you want it, get that and go from there, all the work that honda did will last a lifetime and you will never have to think about it cracking.
also...the jdm del sol bumpers come with no bumper reflectors, maybe you can find a jdm sol bumper with no aux lights, and no reflectors and only have to shave the license plate holes.
EDIT:: "done cheaper" and "done correctly" are often NOT THE SAME. aftermarket bumpers can be had for half the price of an oem, but almost never fit correctly. as they say, you get what you pay for, if honda made a bumper thats almost teh way you want it, get that and go from there, all the work that honda did will last a lifetime and you will never have to think about it cracking.
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-mark-
if you attempt to shave those light holes, your gonna have a tough time, i do custom plastic shaving all the time, the larger the area, the weaker it can become. Most of the plastic repair puttys only reccomend a 1/4 to 1/2 inch thick bead AT MAX, Of course you can alway cut a piece of plastic near the size of the circle and make your bead small, thats just a very large hole to make look proper, but is possible. Make sure to use the correct cleansing agent when you start grinding into your plastic. raw plastic is oily and when cut open it will start to seep, i use a product called poly prep which will dry out the oil before applying anytype of plastic repair or doing any welding. A polyurethane glazing putty can be used for a final glaze coat, just go thin with it, bumpers flex alot. I agree with ROE, if this is your first time i would not do it. I would not reccomend this to any customer,without them willing to pay the consequences later.
Last edited by IMPATIENT; May 27, 2009 at 03:47 AM.
Yea. I was thinking that would be the only way to do it was to find a sheet of plastic or donner bumper of some sorts and cut out the shapes i need and then just weld or bond them together and then do the whole bondo/paint prep thing. and thanks your post def helped alot i think ill start getting some supplies together and see how it turns out. worst comes to worst i buy a new bumper. thanks again.
if you want to find a bunch of info on this including some how-to's /walkthrough's you should check this site out, you'll have to do some searching but its on there
www.vwvortex.com
Any updates? Did you do it??
Im interested in doing this as well.. But I'll get an OEM replica bumper from interstate auto body parts nearby to f**** with... 35 bucks..
LMK if you did this and how.
Im interested in doing this as well.. But I'll get an OEM replica bumper from interstate auto body parts nearby to f**** with... 35 bucks..
LMK if you did this and how.
if you attempt to shave those light holes, your gonna have a tough time, i do custom plastic shaving all the time, the larger the area, the weaker it can become. Most of the plastic repair puttys only reccomend a 1/4 to 1/2 inch thick bead AT MAX, Of course you can alway cut a piece of plastic near the size of the circle and make your bead small, thats just a very large hole to make look proper, but is possible. Make sure to use the correct cleansing agent when you start grinding into your plastic. raw plastic is oily and when cut open it will start to seep, i use a product called poly prep which will dry out the oil before applying anytype of plastic repair or doing any welding. A polyurethane glazing putty can be used for a final glaze coat, just go thin with it, bumpers flex alot. I agree with ROE, if this is your first time i would not do it. I would not reccomend this to any customer,without them willing to pay the consequences later.
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