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Why are cars shiny??

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kriskwery | 13:03 Sun 20th Aug 2006 | Motoring
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Why doesn't anybody seem to produce a car paint with a matt finish?

Surely it would be much more practical ... my once gleaming solar red MG TF with conventional high gloss paintwork looks less than lovely after 4 years of minor surface abrasions from cleaning/cat scratches/stone chips. Perhaps a matt surface would "absorb" marks. Who cares if you can't see your reflection in the blasted car ?? Not me!!
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Cars are shiny to increase areodynamics and fuel efficiency ,and to make the rain fall off .todays paint is waterbased with laquer, when i first started painting cars they still had cellulose paint which was a pig to get a good shine then 2 pack paint was all the rage but very toxic.
Also people like shiny cars due to posing etc and a nice set of wheels makes the car cool.
As for matt paint its pigment seems to be alot stronger for some reason as my ex army landrover was matt green/black. even after going down thousands of miles of greenlanes it never seemd to be all that bad.
Paint on cars these days is very thin i agree all you get is 1 or 2 coats of primer, then your 2 coats of basecoat and then your laquer.
Alot of new cars like prototypes are in matt black and some look very sexy , as for matt cars being produced thats probably along way off,unless you do it yourself.

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