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New Paint Can Heal its Own Scratches

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  • New Paint Can Heal its Own Scratches

    Self-healing paint helps drivers out of a scrape





    From Leo Lewis in Tokyo

    THE dread that grips every car owner when they pull into a parking space that is slightly too small could soon be prevented by an invention from Japan — a transparent vehicle body paint that repairs scratches on its own. The encounter with a thorny rose bush, the swipe from a fingernail and even the ravages of an automatic carwash brush will no longer hold any fear for drivers. Within a few hours of the damage occurring, the paint will start to re-form itself over the scratch, and by morning the mark should have disappeared.
    The Scratch Guard Coat comes courtesy of the car group Nissan, and will soon be making its debut on the notoriously narrow and scratch-prone roads of Japan. The Japanese company will be offering the special paint as an option on its X-Trail SUV before deciding whether to use the product on its range of cars.
    The paint will be offered to customers prepared to pay an extra 52,500 yen (£251) on top of the standard price of the X-Trail, and its makers claim that it will continue to work for about three years. Because of Nissan’s corporate partnership with Renault of France, the product’s success in Japan could mean that the paint soon starts appearing on cars in Europe.
    Even if the car is attacked with a Y10 coin — the Japanese vandal’s weapon of choice — the paint should be able to cope with the damage. Within about a week, a Nissan spokesman said, the paint will repair the scratch. “Of course, you could speed the whole process up by pouring some warm water over the affected area — that would probably repair it in a matter of minutes,” he added.
    Carmakers have been trying for years to offer their customers some sort of reliable scratch-proofing: successes have been few and far between, and the conventional wisdom has been to develop harder grades of paint to give the surface a basic resistance. The Nissan approach, which it has undertaken with Nippon Paint, its supplier, will push research in the opposite direction.
    The result is a transparent, synthetic resin, the high density of which means that it slowly flows back to fill any cut in its surface. The proposed thickness of the coating is about the same as a normal coat of paint, which means that it will repair scratches made to that depth. The paint has been designed to coat dark cars, but Nissan said that there was no reason why the technology could not be used on lighter hues.
    Japan’s obsession with cleanliness has sent other corporations in a similar direction. Asahi Glass has produced a self-cleaning window, and Panasonic has produced an air-conditioner in which a miniature robot patrols, collecting dust.



    Source: http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/new...icle745093.ece

  • #2
    Re: New Paint Can Heal its Own Scratches

    IF it's fluid at some level, that is it can re-flow to level itself out, then the question is...

    Can it still be worked on by the average car owner?

    From experiences, things that are rubbery or gushy or fluid don't take well to being abraded or polished.

    Could be if your car gets scratches you just have to wait for the paint to repair itself as in you can't help it.

    Also wonder if this is just deep defects or will it heal/seal/level fine swirls too?

    Will it machine buff?
    Will it wax-up?

    Can always hope for the best...

    Mike Phillips
    760-515-0444
    showcargarage@gmail.com

    "Find something you like and use it often"

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: New Paint Can Heal its Own Scratches

      Originally posted by Mike Phillips View Post
      IF it's fluid at some level, that is it can re-flow to level itself out, then the question is...

      Can it still be worked on by the average car owner?

      From experiences, things that are rubbery or gushy or fluid don't take well to being abraded or polished.

      Could be if your car gets scratches you just have to wait for the paint to repair itself as in you can't help it.

      Also wonder if this is just deep defects or will it heal/seal/level fine swirls too?

      Will it machine buff?
      Will it wax-up?

      Can always hope for the best...

      I have been asking myself the same questions for a very long time. There's never an answer, though. Not to this point.
      We are all apprentices in a craft where no one ever becomes a master.

      Ernest Hemingway (1899-1961)

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: New Paint Can Heal its Own Scratches

        On one hand it seems promising. On the other it leaves a lot of unanswered questions. Should be interesting if this paint does indeed prove viable and comes to the marketplace completely.
        quality creates its own demand

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        • #5
          Re: New Paint Can Heal its Own Scratches

          a paint that never needs polished- what fun is that??

          Comment


          • #6
            Re: New Paint Can Heal its Own Scratches

            As far as i know about this clear coat,if the damage doesn't pass through the primer it can be self repaired.the repairing time is according to the size of the damage.Also this ability lasts only for 3 years and after that period you can detail it as a normal CC,but i don't know what you have to do on those 3 years.A painter in Cyprus told me that you don't need to polish your car for 3 years but i also have questions how you should keep clean this CC.According that it will be a swirl/scratch free for 3 years CC you will only need a clay bar and some LSP/glaze etc..But this is just my thought...
            I AM HERE TO LEARN

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            • #7
              Re: New Paint Can Heal its Own Scratches

              ? Didn't this claim come out a while ago?? is this realistic? if so i think meguiars would have made a self healing polish by now!

              I just watched spongebob with my son where spongebob drew a picture of himself and the picture came to life.........................

              Comment

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