🔥 Transform your ride with peelable, poppin’ orange power!
Plasti Dip 11-oz Matte Spray Paint in Blaze Orange delivers a vibrant, waterproof, and flexible rubberized coating ideal for vehicle parts and outdoor use. This removable spray paint offers a smooth matte finish, is manufactured in the USA, and is designed for universal application on plastic and other surfaces, making it perfect for professionals and enthusiasts seeking bold, durable customization.
Brand | Plasti Dip |
Color | Blaze Orange |
Finish Type | Gloss |
Size | 1 Count (Pack of 1) |
Item Volume | 311 Milliliters |
Special Feature | Removable, stretchy, rubber, flexible |
Unit Count | 1.0 Count |
Paint Type | Spray |
Specific Uses For Product | Interior/Exterior |
Surface Recommendation | Plastic |
Indoor/Outdoor Usage | Outdoor |
Item Form | Aerosol |
Included Components | automotive-spray-paint |
Is Waterproof | True |
Model Name | 11218 |
Package Information | Can |
Color Code | Orange |
Coverage | 7 |
Water Resistance Level | Waterproof |
UPC | 075815112187 |
Global Trade Identification Number | 00075815112187 |
Manufacturer | Performix |
Item Weight | 11 ounces |
Product Dimensions | 2.75 x 2.75 x 8 inches |
Item model number | 11218 |
Is Discontinued By Manufacturer | No |
Exterior | Painted |
Manufacturer Part Number | 11218 |
Special Features | Removable, stretchy, rubber, flexible |
S**E
Its plastidip.... till you pull out the black light. Its still plastidip it just glows now.
If you know what plasti dip is you know what to expect with this product, however, under a black light, this color is absolutely gorgeous. I used it for my old PC Build and it looked better than i had hoped. Ill see if i can update this review with photos when i have more time if thats even possible.
H**I
Vale la pena totalmente
Muy bueno la verdad. Me gustó!!!! Es lo que promete
G**L
Not that hard to use, even easier to remove
This shade of orange is a bit on the clown side for my use, wish I had gotten the burnt orange (I guess "muscle car"). I spent ages applying it (waiting 30 minutes between coats is a pain, but necessary) and just hated the result. Good news, it was easy enough to peel off. This is my first time using this product. I watched plenty of YouTube videos first, but I can't emphasize enough not to underestimate the overspray. I ended up with a light dusting of orange all over the dang place, despite what I thought was plenty of masking. But, good news again, it does come off easily enough. I put a black stripe on my car hood (not this specific product, obviously, but still Plasti-dip) and I'm pretty pleased with how that came out. So can't fault the item, it was my bad for not researching color more.
H**N
Very, Very Bright
A little too bright for me but easy to use. Comes off with ease. There’s a lot of great uses for this like customizing your car’s emblems and so much more!
R**D
Do white first if you're covering black.
If your planning on covering black, cover your parts with white Plasti Dip first. I found the Blaze Orange didn't cover black well. So, I covered the parts with plain white Plasti Dip first. White covers black much better then the blaze orange by itself. Then applying the blaze orange on top of the white looked fantastic. I love the fact I can completely change the color of my motorcycle without permanently altering the original finish.
M**S
avoid
the orange blaze does not spray every nozzle clogged I even ordered another 6 pack (stupid choice) and purchased a better nozzle from dyc website. still clogged. black plasti dip works, white clogs occasionally. soaked nozzles in paint thinner, did nothing. Does not apply to metal well. faded on my spoilers to very very light orange in about 3 months. 0 stars!!!! your welcome for saving you time / $
S**
Great coating over plastic. Rugged and smooth results
I was surprised and psyched by my results. I used the orange to spray over bike helmets to ride in the woods during hunting season. The finish is smooth and slightly rubbery. It helped to spray it lightly and make 3 or 4 passes as it dried. I got impatient with one helmet and sprayed it all on at once and got some 3D drip marks on the finish, but that was my faultAnyways, the helmets are now BRIGHT blaze orange and I feel safer riding in the woods.Paint was expensive, but it was totally worth it.
C**Y
Hey, look! It's the plastidip you know, in a rattle can!
Using this to coat my tools at work and not dipping my car. If relevant, I bought my Miata freshly "dipped" using the black aerosol and when trying to peel it off 4mo later, it wasn't as easy as I see on videos at all. It's hardened and am still planning to sand it all off as if it were paint. Something might have gone awry in the prep.I sprayed my tools after a primer and they've all sat for a few days. I peeled it all off one test tool and it went really easy. It's a great bright matte orange, a shade brighter than Hugger Orange. I like using spray instead of dip when I want to tape off sections I don't want covered because dipping has just always been a mess and leaves sharp edges where I pull tape off or more than likely cut the areas I don't want covered off. The first coat is thin, the following coats I went thicker like the cans of dip and if you haven't sprayed plastidip, it's going to look like you screwed up if you did it correctly. The cover coats are correct if you lay it on thick and it's ugly and bumpy (I'll see if I can get an image of this ugliness soon). When you come back in 30min or so, it'll be smooth like flat paint but it's plastidipped. Since it can peel off and is a great feature of plastidipping, the edges will want some protection for tools IMO because you're using them and will start wanting to peel off unintentionally. Myself, I've tapped back from the plastidipped edge (1/8" or so) and painted the rest with common Rustolium Hammered finish. I've had good luck with that in the past and is now something I just do on tools. The paint makes a good transition OVER the Plastidip ends and doesn't start peel back on it's own from usage.There's pros about this for sure and they're all basic reasons to like PlastiDip in general. One neat thing I stumbled upon was for painting clear Lexan R/C bodies. Do all the detail work with Testers, do the main body color last with aerosol Plastidip here, peel and re-color your R/C in an hour (dry time before ready to run) any day you want. Don't like Blaze orange on your old T-Maxx? Peel it and go blue. With that said right to the...Cons:Price. Price can't be controlled and doing tools is fine. I just can't imaging covering a full automobile with this stuff. I've been a hobbiest painter for decades and basecoat for an entire car is about $150 in material, then for the matte look around $200 in matte clear (then the price of compressor and gun(s) of course), but I can't see one of these cans cover more than a door panel with all the coats I'd feel comfortable with. Ten cans ($150) just doesn't seem like it could even cover my little Miata. If the cool factor is that you can change colors every 6mo because you're bored then I see about $600yr just to change colors all the time. I guess I'm old and grumpy...get off my lawn ;)The clogs I did see but had zero issues with this order of orange cans at all. I'd come back for the next coat, it's clogged, I scrape my fingernail over the nozzle and it's back to spraying. All 6 cans clogged but all also cleared this easily as well. Scrape, scrape...back to dipping. I guess I'm use to that spraying thicker material and solvent shouldn't ever really touch or thin this material once gassed off and dry; It's not paint ya'll. That's the cool part. You could toss your dipped tool in thinner for days, come back, and it's still dipped. To be clear, I never saw the clogs on this order while using a single can constantly and only when I sat one down for a while. I for sure could spray for at least 5 minutes which is most of the can when your project is all pre-prepped and spraying it all at once. So I guess that's what I'd suggest: Plan a project that uses the full can and you shouldn't have a problem. If you've ever used expanding foam, same idea; Use it or lose it.Three stars because nothing is 5 stars unless it changes my life, nothing is 1 star unless it tries to kill me or a blunt advertising lie (Flex Seal), so 3 stars only because I find it expensive to have good ol' plastidip in a "convenient" spray can. On top of this, I wouldn't use rattle cans to dip a full vehicle at all, just parts. There's just better setups of dipping a car if you want to do it frequently compared to $2,500 to wrap it each time. I do expect the San Diego and thinner air'd Alpine sun to fade it to a shade of yellow-orange but zero opinion on that at this time.I still suggest buying it and trying it out to see if it works for you. Just keep in mind that this stuff is just not paint...it's rubber in a can. And no, it's not flex seal (I've been asked. Neat thought though, "the leak was at the bright orange section I covered with plastidip")
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