@@raduszilagyi6055i did a similar method with a steel door about one year ago and it still looks as good as it was done. But I guess a car is just another thing as it gets wet more often and needs to withstand mor different forces.
Hahah ha I know a guy that used to repair his rust vehicles this way back in the 90's ! Works for alittle while but eventually the foam and puddy works its way loose
I’d suggest adding “do not try this at home” to the title
Sadly the foam is absorbing mouse on the inside and just going to accelerate rust around your repair
I‘m actually interested in that method. How does that look now, 3 months later?
Like it needs to be repaired again. In 2 years you spend more money than a proper repair.
@@raduszilagyi6055i did a similar method with a steel door about one year ago and it still looks as good as it was done. But I guess a car is just another thing as it gets wet more often and needs to withstand mor different forces.
That’s just embarrassing
Repair?? For a week maybe.
Come in my auto body repair to fix it very nice
This is a joke right? ...Right?
Hahah ha I know a guy that used to repair his rust vehicles this way back in the 90's ! Works for alittle while but eventually the foam and puddy works its way loose