Re: What do you pay to have your race cars painted???
[Re: 8urvette]
#1189303
03/02/12 04:17 PM
03/02/12 04:17 PM
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Joined: Aug 2005
Posts: 761 Southington Ct.
turbobitt
super stock
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super stock
Joined: Aug 2005
Posts: 761
Southington Ct.
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Quote:
When I worked at high end shop (literally next to chip foose, who referred us business) we were 10 grand to get in the door. Usually went up when the car got naked. It was show car quality, in so cal car went to pebble beach won best of paint.... yada yada yada..... We used high quality materials and on average we had over 3000 in just materials at our cost.
Most show cars received over 200 hours of documented labor- and yes a show cars usually went over 20,000$ The most expensive car was a 31 ford coupe- We did most of the cars on that page.
http://www.wheelersspeedshop.com/projects.html
IIRC 27,000$, I personally did ALOT of the body work, and color sanded it and polished it and assembled it. It was through wheelers speed shop who was 1/2 block away from us. Great guys there!
We refused to do the white flames on it, so we painted it, it left came back with those things on it came back and we finished it.
The base coat on that car was 700$ a gallon. 3 gallons. just BASE!!!!
If we didn't strip a car (very rare) we could get it done for under 10k. also all cars were in and out of our shop within 3 months. I left the shop as we got in a 1970 cuda convertible 440 car.... I wanted to stay just a bit longer, but couldn't
Most people don't understand what it takes to make these things nice. Here on the east coast and the rust issues associated with New England winters, we uasually see well over 400+ hours in a rotiseri restoration and assembly. For a "Paint Job" is something different. Price would depend on what is on the car now for paint and materials and if it would need to be stripped and bodywork redone, jams painted, underhood and trunk, and engine bay. 10K sounds like it may be in the ballpark if minimal stripping and bodywork is required. Lets say a bodyshop charges $75/hour including materials, paint, storage, heat(expensive to run a paint booth), electricity, and other misc overhead cost. 10K worth of work is about 133 hours of shop labor. Allan G.
1970 Challenger w/572 Hemi street car and my pride and joy.
1986 T-Type with 272 Stage 2 Buick V6 engine - True 8 second street car. Just updated the engine and put down 928 HP @ 35# boost to the ground on chasis dyno.
1976 Cee Bee Avenger Jet Boat - 460 Ford powered.
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Re: What do you pay to have your race cars painted???
[Re: j.mcconnell]
#1189304
03/02/12 04:27 PM
03/02/12 04:27 PM
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Joined: Mar 2009
Posts: 1,058 bigfork mn
dragram440
super stock
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super stock
Joined: Mar 2009
Posts: 1,058
bigfork mn
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My best friend owns a body shop. He painted it and helped me with the final straightening. worked out good for me. I put a new one piece floor and he helped me with some rust repair on the quarters. Restored the whole car in his bodyshop over the winter 2009/2010 He is also a drag racer with a low 9 secound twin turbo 67 camaro
Last edited by dragram440; 03/02/12 04:32 PM.
67' charger 499 RB
10.57 at 127
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Re: What do you pay to have your race cars painted???
[Re: dragram440]
#1189306
03/03/12 05:19 AM
03/03/12 05:19 AM
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Joined: Jan 2003
Posts: 4,448 Phoenix, AZ
MoparBilly
master
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master
Joined: Jan 2003
Posts: 4,448
Phoenix, AZ
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I can go to the store, buy a dozen eggs, some bacon, muffins etc., and the wife and I can whip up a mean breakfast for the family fairly reasonable. Breakfast at the beach served up by a chef and a waiter...still the same food, but considerably more pricey!! The less involved you want to be in the process, from every aspect, the more you should expect to pay. I don't mind when people work someone over on the price of a used part, or a car, or some thing, trying to get the best deal. But I've never seen a situation where I felt it was appropriate to dicker with a craftsman over the price of his services. The caviat, "You get what you pay for" usually applies, but I'll take it a step further, "Pay for what you get"! Many times, when a job comes out smoothly and I'm happy with the outcome, I'll pay more than the agreed upon total, and it always pays dividends later on. I also hate paying a craftsman to do grunt work that I can handle myself, so whether it's removing stuff for cage work, or block sanding, or stripping an engine for machine work, your own sweat and muscle can make any job less exspensive. That being what it is, I find it hard to justify a killer, top of the line paint job on a Race Car...I mean, a Drag Strip is a hostile environment! My street-strip Valiant is basic single stage white and has had about 4 touch up/ and repairs at 300-500 a pop in the last 5 years. I spent 2k on the Challenger the last time, but the cheap clear has been the downfall of that paintjob, so it's due again.
"Livin' in a powder keg and givin' off sparks"
4 Street cars, 5 Race engines
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