Most people in our PT club have had their bumpers painted and that
eliminates it of course. I haven't had mine painted and have to deal with
what's referred to as the dreaded "tape marks". I use a tire shine product
on a cheap wax pad and rub the bumpers down. It may take doing it several
times if you've never done it before. But keeping a shine product on the
bumper will keep those markes to a minimum or even to the point they aren't
seen.
Judging from what Ford and GMC did when the paint peeled from the
hoods of their vehicles (they repainted them no charge) if the PT was
a product of theirs, they would have corrected the problem, no charge.
When the tape marks first started appearing, I took my Cruiser to
them. They more or less told me in manufacturer/dealer speak, "Tough
$h!t!" Since then Chrysler has come out with vehicles that I really
like the looks of, but from they way they blew me off and did not
stand behind a problem caused by them, I will never buy another
Chrysler product.
For years, Chrysco has taken the low road with many OEM accessory,
ancillary and cosmetic defects, even cracked heads and blocks.
ZERO PRODUCT SUPPORT = ZERO REPEAT SALES
Actually early on in the discovery of these tape marks, some dealers did
repaint the bumpers at no cost (some, not all). These black bumpers were
only on 2001 to 2003 PT's. All 2001 models had the black bumpers. All
2002 models except the Dream Cruiser had black bumpers and in 2003 only
the base models had black bumpers(GT's and Dream's had painted bumpers).
My PT is taupe color and from 30 ft away, you can't tell the bumpers
haven't been painted. Had my PT been any other color, the contrast is
too great and I would have spent the money to have them painted the body
color.
> My 2002 shows the tape marks rather well. what is a good
> recommendation to cover the grey and tape marks? i do like the later
> pt's with the painted bumpers!
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>
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As mentioned in an earlier post, I use a tire gloss product. Sometimes it
may take several coats of rubbing it in to get them to fade away. Of
course painting that part is the best solution.