Please Help Identify Body Seam Repair & Defect
I found two areas that may need extra attention and I hope somebody here will be able to help...
The first is about a quarter sized area near the back of the RR fender:
Questionable area is above the build out for the rear bumper mount
Closeup of the ying & yang looking area. I think part of a bonding strip is behind this area but I don't know if that's related to this ??? that is just forward of the bonding seam.
There is no such "marked" area on the other rear fender
Any ideas what this is or what caused it? Is there anything special I should do before painting to ensure it isn't visible or cause future problems?
The second area is some sort of chevy dealer repair that was done to the seam area above the wheel on that same fender.:
Here is the fender's repaired area
From the bottom the layers I THINK I see are red/brown primer, fiberglass, primer, blue paint, bondo or some other coating, fiberglass, primer and finally paint again on the top. Does that look/sound correct to you?
A bit more sanding revealed these X and + " stitching" marks that also were previously showing through the paint. Anybody have a clue to what these are??
Close inspection of a + mark looks like it MIGHT be some sort of heat tool mark like something heated & melted into the bonding adhesive or the glass itself to hold the panel edges together. Is that even remotely possible?
Any help identifying these repair marks and how to deal with them so they don't reappear after repainting would be greatly appreciated by this novice!!!
Thanks
Last edited by nwav8tor; May 25, 2026 at 02:34 AM.
I would start by looking closely at the back-side of those areas. See what if any damage looks like back there. Then assess what the next steps would be if it looks rough (like backside repairs). If it looks good on the backside, I would at least V-out the cracks by the bumper mount and re-glass (with resin and fiberglass strand) in those areas, and sand that down to match the opposite side of the car. Same thing if the bumper mount hole needs to be closed-up a little (glass it closed a little and file it the size it needs to be).
The quarter-sized repair area, if it's smooth, and backside looks fine, it can be primed over as-is. Should be fine. A guy can do any bodywork now over the bare fiberglass (if needed) or do it over primer ...after it's primed ...however you choose. You'd want a filler that was for applying over 2k primer ..which most good ones are. I always sand the primer anyway with like 80 or 120# before applying filler over it. Wash the primer off (to remove all dust for best adhesion) ....and THEN apply the filler, if you are applying over primer ...to give the filler some scratches to 'bite' to. Or, as I say, you can do your bodywork straight on the fiberglass ...if any further bodywork is needed.
Are you going to strip the rest of the car for a repaint? Or what's the plan there?
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Last edited by Mark G; May 27, 2026 at 03:31 PM.
One question (of many) I have is how far do I have to go? The single layer or original paint is coming off fairly well, but there's still a good amount of the red oxide? primer left. Does that need to be stripped or sanded down to bare fiberglass or can I prime and paint over that remaining original primer?
Ended up finding 5 of these "stitches" just below the fender seam line.
Closeup of the stiches
Another closeup
Filler to the right (forward) of the stiches
More sanding of the old filler exposed some original paint beneath. I guess that means the paint wasn't even removed before the filler was applied right over it.
My plan was to dish out all the body bonding seams and fill with VPA to hopefully prevent them from telegraphing through the paint like before.
Visible seam line on front right fender
Now I'm worried that when I go to dish out the seam and area around the right rear stiches, the fender seam might open up again. From inside the wheel well, the bonding stip looks OK, but there was evidence of fiberglass cloth being used on the back side of the repair area. I removed that and re-glassed it with matt about a year ago.
Sure wish I knew how those "stiches" were utilized/made for the repair!
Last edited by nwav8tor; Jun 10, 2026 at 03:58 PM.











