@@flamingspinach no. Nowadays most of them slather on a bunch of bondo and it looks great for a couple years at most, then either it starts to crack, or you slam the door and a huge chunk just falls off and exposes the rusty metal underneath. But it usually lasts long enough for the warranty to expire.
I own a Bolt and this is the guy that I would take it to for repairs, great job.
Thanks 😁👍
I own a Bolt, too. But, I'd rather not need repairs.
@@wassiswallylokhankin191 😁👍
So far... your the second person I know who can make a car look brand new! Great Job Sir!
Excellent work!!!
Thanks
Wow that is some incredible work!
Thanks
You Sir, are an artist!
Thanks
Bravo! That's why car body restorers earn more than mechanics.
Thanks
Nice work 👍. I wish more bodywork guys still had skills and pride like this. Nowadays, a lot of guys just slather on about 20 pounds of bondo.
Thanks
This is how body men fixed cars when I was a kid some 55-60 years ago. Lost art.
😊
How do they do it nowadays, then? Do you mean that nowadays they just throw away the bent parts and replace them with brand new parts?
@@flamingspinach no. Nowadays most of them slather on a bunch of bondo and it looks great for a couple years at most, then either it starts to crack, or you slam the door and a huge chunk just falls off and exposes the rusty metal underneath. But it usually lasts long enough for the warranty to expire.
Great job
Thanks
What is being used at 12:38 to 12:55? A blow torch for heat but what is the substance being added ? What is it's purpose?
It's tin. That's instead of filler.
Great demonstration of skill. How long did it take in real life?
I don't remember now, but I think a week.
It's an Opel Ampera E
Did you reuse the wrecked parts?
Some had to be repaired.