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How to make a skirt.

Posted: Sat Jul 19, 2003 8:11 pm
by Jiggalata
How do you make a skirt for any car? I thought it would look cool on my 350z

Posted: Sun Jul 20, 2003 12:12 am
by crazydave
I haven't done a full skirt, but I did this air dam by super glueing a piece of zip zap packaging to the edge. I use a piece of the dome where it started to curve, so that the air dam has a slight curve to it. Then I sanded the edge down before before I painted.

Image

Posted: Fri Jul 25, 2003 1:14 pm
by hondacivic
crazydave wrote:I haven't done a full skirt, but I did this air dam by super glueing a piece of zip zap packaging to the edge. I use a piece of the dome where it started to curve, so that the air dam has a slight curve to it. Then I sanded the edge down before before I painted.

Image
I will buy that car off of you :-D

Posted: Fri Jul 25, 2003 1:22 pm
by Pie
:sad: aww... dammit crazydave, i thought i was the only one who made lip kits and skirts for my cars... :cry:

haha, damn nice job on that supra tho... makes the zip body look a lot more like what it's supposed to be =)

my free-hand putty skirts never look all that great, and are never that smooth. basically you just chopped and glued that rite?

Posted: Fri Jul 25, 2003 1:29 pm
by CaboWabo
welcome to da hood hondacivic

Posted: Fri Jul 25, 2003 9:53 pm
by noxorc
Hey Cdave, did you drop that nose? the wheels are really huggin the wells.

-n

Posted: Mon Sep 22, 2003 11:01 am
by crazydave
noxorc wrote:Hey Cdave, did you drop that nose? the wheels are really huggin the wells.

-n
Well this was a couple months ago, but I hate leaving ???s unanswered.

Anyways, Yes, that car is slammed all the way around. I had cut new slots in the body.


****Edit: I'll go ahead and update you guys on my technique too.

Now what I do is cut some plastic from the thick part of the Zip Zap packaging. I super glue two pieces together so I have a thicker piece of plastic. I cut it to shape, sand it smooth. Super glue it on and sand it some more.

Here's a couple examples:

Image
Image

Posted: Tue Oct 14, 2003 7:17 pm
by pimped_out_honda
im a smart ass so dont get made u take some fabric then a sewing machine and sew the fabric together. then give it to your girlfriend. lol no j/k what all them said i just follow what they say but that mest up my cars so now i used melted candle wax.

Posted: Tue Oct 14, 2003 7:49 pm
by VooDooMafia
pimped_out_honda wrote:im a smart ass so dont get made u take some fabric then a sewing machine and sew the fabric together. then give it to your girlfriend. lol no j/k what all them said i just follow what they say but that mest up my cars so now i used melted candle wax.
That cant be very strong though :???:

Posted: Tue Oct 14, 2003 8:03 pm
by pimped_out_honda
i never said for use and if i do it right it is strong unless im jumping off ramps but i do it for show when i got a good one painted perfect then i will enter it by the way my truck didnt work (badboyporshe69) is my older name i think but i decided id build a escalade ext i think out of a diecast cevy pick up and wax. i put the stuff from my truck in it.

Posted: Thu Oct 23, 2003 1:13 pm
by 194gvan
hey thanks for bumping this topic, i was wondering about some of the custom body work ive seen.

ive only had my first bit about a month and ive got a second on the way, and more accessories. id like to do some thing custom real soon.

i have another question, considering the cars are so small, what grit sandpaper do you reccomend sanding down with? i take it i shouldnt even bother with a dremel tool unless i plan on tearing the car to shreds :)

thanks

Posted: Thu Oct 23, 2003 2:05 pm
by CaboWabo
you can use a dremel if you plan on doing some major chopping, but be careful because it will eat into the plastic very quickly.

for sandpaper, the grits vary depending on what you're doing.
the larger the portion you need to take off, the heavier the grit you can use.
once you get to the point of "smoothing things out", you'd use a super fine grit, like wet sanding.

Posted: Sat Dec 13, 2003 8:06 pm
by Colin4371
for a body kit, i just cut out a strip of a credit card to my desired ride height, heat it up with a candle and bend it to the contours of the front end e.g where it wraps around to the fenders. cut it to size, glue it on, then use Bondo Auto Body Filler to fill in the cracks, sand smooth, and voila!

Posted: Sat Jan 24, 2004 3:57 pm
by Finks
Can somone post an example of a cerdit card body kit? Just figuring you wouldn't have much but a flat surface added, unless you etched it or what eva. Arite thnx

Posted: Thu May 27, 2004 10:49 am
by stampede_dude
wow dave what is that blue car in the bottom of the post?i usually dont go for imports but dang that thing looks GOOD for a zipzap body.