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[TR] Covering a newly painted car

Subject: [TR] Covering a newly painted car
From: tjwakeman at gmail.com (TeriAnn J. Wakeman)
Date: Wed, 27 Jul 2011 05:49:25 -0700
References: <DE83F2B4C0AE4DD69C0698DCB32F6F3B@Shemp> <F3B1140DF97C4E5A916218AAB286AAA6@Shemp> <4E2D6B17.3090504@gmail.com> <BB679035-0416-4A56-AC87-E1672BCCF341@flash.net>
On 7/26/11 4:37 PM, Wbeech wrote:
> Teriann,
> Did you use the type of shrink-wrap that they seal up boats with for the 
> winter?  Did you use any additional padding over the cover and under the wrap 
> to protect the front of the car from any road gravel?
>    

My assumption, wrong though it might be is that my car cover would 
protect the car surface and the wrap would:

1. Hold the car cover in place
2. provide minimal but some rain protection
3. provide a first lay of protection of things being thrown up.

But most importantly keep the car cover in place.

I should mention I had the interior full of stuff and the car cover was 
also there to keep the wind from sucking stuff out of the inside of the 
car (The hard to was on the TR3 but not the side curtains).

I just used the commercial stretch plastic wrap that adheres to itself.  
One problem is that I had to add more wrap about half way there because 
some of the first wrap had stretched.  I was unaware of stuff they use 
for boats in the winter.  Never seen it used in any of the marinas in 
the bay.

I double wrapped the car under two layers.

I guess I could have done as well without wrapping the car in the first 
place but it would have been rained upon a few times and the interior 
would have been soaked.  And I would have been worried about vandles.

Maybe the wrap was more of a security blanket for me?  But bottom line 
is that the car's paint was unharmed and plastic never beat upon bare paint.

Teriann

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