Mick wrote:
There must be a certain level of discretion the colour matching scanners go down to, to prevent the mixers being called for a single cubic centimeter of a particular colour and so on. I imagine you could call in a dozen tints t omake a colour, or just a few if you had the choice.
Does this make a difference, and is it part of the problem of colour matching?
I'm not sure I understand what you are asking but I'll try to answer your question.
We currently don't have a spectro as part of our colour offer, we use colour chips (fan decks). A spectro measures colours and then will either find the nearest colour from the library it has or create a formula depending on the spectro's capability.
This means we must match the colours requested, the benefit for the customer is the Colour is not a near enough. But you do have a two to four week lead time.
As for the number of tinters used in the formulae, again it depends on the customers expectation. The number of tinters needed is more dependent on colour type (white, blue, ect).
If the colour is required for touch up (small volume of colour) painters will usually match the colour as the colour will have changed for the reasons I listed previously. For overall repainting we can justify the time as we are normally also supplying primer and clearcoat, thinners, ect. Getting a match from a standard is also a true representation of the colour when the car was new.