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Has anyone had any experience with a hood protector that uses tape to secured to the hood? And if so does it damage the paint if removed
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That's what the Ford Aeroskin and Aeroskin II use. 3M heavy-duty mounting tape. Doesn't damage the hood if you take it off correctly using heat and patience, just like using said tape on any other part of a vehicle.Has anyone had any experience with a hood protector that uses tape to secured to the hood? And if so does it damage the paint if removed
I had an Aeroskin on my 2023 Bronco BD a little over a year. I noticed several spots where dust/debris was collecting on the windshield side of the Aeroskin. It irritated me enough that I spent some time trying to clean it out without causing damage to the skin or the hood. Gave up. Removed it, and to my disappointment, there were visable marks in the paint and very noticable "yellowing" of the paint under the skin.Has anyone had any experience with a hood protector that uses tape to secured to the hood? And if so does it damage the paint if removed
Did you use heat and/or any solvents while removing the tape? Or did you just pull the deflector straight up without cutting the tape with a wax string or floss first? Definitely need to cut the tape and then remove the tape separately from the deflector to prevent it from yanking the paint off of the metal. Paint adhesion can only be so good.My experience is that it DID damage the paint. I bought my Bronco used and the PO installed a carbon fiber look protector/deflector. The carbon fiber got weathered and I pulled it off very carefully. This is the result!
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The pic is a bit misleading because the chips are very small. They were all along the outside edge of the 3M tape. I ended up installing the Ford non-carbon fiber protector and positioned it to cover the chips.
EDIT: I need to clarify. These chips were along the outside edge of the tape , NOT under the tape.