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Old 11-09-2018, 12:18 PM   #1
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I agree with most folks, not my cup of tea but mod on. The upside to modifications is that they push the envelope and we all benefit from someone’s creativity. The downside is that they always go one step too far. I think you are getting close...
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Old 11-09-2018, 02:49 PM   #2
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I agree with most folks, not my cup of tea but mod on. The upside to modifications is that they push the envelope and we all benefit from someone’s creativity. The downside is that they always go one step too far. I think you are getting close...
The good news I keep all the old parts. Can switch it all back in a weekend 😉
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Old 11-09-2018, 08:50 PM   #3
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??? 🤔


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Old 11-10-2018, 12:03 AM   #4
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??? ��


IMHO that’s the best look so far. I’d say it’s a decent 10 footer. At the least I’d add black, flat grill material (real flat grill material, not rain gutter mesh) behind the real vent openings to give them a ‘bottom’ to look similar to the false openings. This tricks the eye into looking ‘at’ the vent, not ‘through’ the vent. Just be sure to get grill material that flows enough air. Automotive Goop is your friend for bonding the grills. It remains flexible, has a reasonable working time and forms a strong bond on properly prepared surfaces.

To take it to the next level (required IMHO but you never know what it’s really gonna look like until you do it and those vents are relatively expensive)

1) carefully cut out the lower two openings, fill, sand and repaint the vent as necessary
2) add the same black grill material behind the new openings. One piece for the lower two openings. It will be close to the surface due to the vent design but it is what it is. In conjunction with step 3 this should work in your favor overall. Real grill material will also give the one (thin) red vane good structural support
3) apply some flat black body wrap to the car in a shape and size that fits completely under the pseudo vent openings. Applying the flat black wrap to the car not only blacks out the pseudo vents, it should also give the pseudo vents some visual sense of depth under their grill.
4) install the vents
5) Only downside is keeping the black body wrap clean without constantly taking the vents off

IIRC, this is basically what Porsche did (in a much more sophisticated fashion) in 2005 when they went to the big vents. If I’m not mistaken the 2005 interior body vent openings are about the same size as the earlier cars.
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Last edited by Oldcarguy; 11-10-2018 at 01:45 AM.
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Old 11-10-2018, 03:34 AM   #5
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Originally Posted by Oldcarguy View Post
IMHO that’s the best look so far. I’d say it’s a decent 10 footer. At the least I’d add black, flat grill material (real flat grill material, not rain gutter mesh) behind the real vent openings to give them a ‘bottom’ to look similar to the false openings. This tricks the eye into looking ‘at’ the vent, not ‘through’ the vent. Just be sure to get grill material that flows enough air. Automotive Goop is your friend for bonding the grills. It remains flexible, has a reasonable working time and forms a strong bond on properly prepared surfaces.

To take it to the next level (required IMHO but you never know what it’s really gonna look like until you do it and those vents are relatively expensive)

1) carefully cut out the lower two openings, fill, sand and repaint the vent as necessary
2) add the same black grill material behind the new openings. One piece for the lower two openings. It will be close to the surface due to the vent design but it is what it is. In conjunction with step 3 this should work in your favor overall. Real grill material will also give the one (thin) red vane good structural support
3) apply some flat black body wrap to the car in a shape and size that fits completely under the pseudo vent openings. Applying the flat black wrap to the car not only blacks out the pseudo vents, it should also give the pseudo vents some visual sense of depth under their grill.
4) install the vents
5) Only downside is keeping the black body wrap clean without constantly taking the vents off

IIRC, this is basically what Porsche did (in a much more sophisticated fashion) in 2005 when they went to the big vents. If I’m not mistaken the 2005 interior body vent openings are about the same size as the earlier cars.
I agree with OCG... decent 10 footer. Looks far better without the mesh. Proceed with OCG's recommendations and it'll really shine.

On another note... have you considered side decals? The ones that run on the bottom from wheel-well to wheel-well? That might look nice in black.

Carry on!
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Old 11-10-2018, 04:56 AM   #6
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Thanks for the input. Anyone out there have a recommendation about where to get some decent looking mesh? Can't find any at local auto parts stores.

Thanks
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Old 11-10-2018, 05:10 AM   #7
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Outside pic. OCG I think you are on to something if I can cut it without ruining it

Last edited by JBauer; 11-10-2018 at 05:45 AM.
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Old 11-10-2018, 05:40 AM   #8
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Thanks for the input. Anyone out there have a recommendation about where to get some decent looking mesh? Can't find any at local auto parts stores.

Thanks
CustomCarGrills dot com has ~30 styles plus mounting/trim accessories. Just google them. Not inexpensive but top of the line products. I’m not affiated with them in any way other than being a satisfied customer.
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Last edited by Oldcarguy; 11-10-2018 at 05:42 AM.
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