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Thread: GTI Scuff Plates

  1. #21

    Quote Originally Posted by xblode View Post
    Hate to say it, but you fitted the rears one in the wrong spot.
    They shouldn't cover the door/body seal.

    Your right about the sticky tape. Even the factory ones are crap!

  2. #22
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    Quote Originally Posted by xblode View Post
    So I'm browsing eBay for VW stuff and I came across some scuff plates for the GTI.

    Wasn't sure how good they would be but for about $45 landed, it worth a shot. Took about 2 weeks from Hong Kong.

    The backing tape was average so I re-applied my own tape. The fronts look good and fit well.

    The rear ones, not so good although I think they are still acceptable. There's a tiny curve in the existing trimwork and these are dead straight.

    All in all, easy peasy for a coupla dollars.



    Hi xblode

    Could you possibly measure them and see if they are the right size to be mounted on the red painted part of the bodywork rather than on the plastic trim? This way if they are the correct size they would protect the paintwork and provide a better solution.

    thanks Bam
    Mk VI 5 Door GTI - Tornado Red, Manual, Tint, MDI. Finally its mine all mine.

  3. #23
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    Thread Starter
    I test fitted both the fronts & backs before applying the tape. I tried all sorts of ways but there's no other way they fit.

    They are generic scuff plates and as someone said in this thread, they don't really protect anything. I kept them on 'cause they do look good.

  4. #24
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    Those look alright.. Still looks a bit disjointed though.

    I don't mind the ones that sit on the paint that are more subtle, they may not do as much though.

    Defeats the purpose if you have to drill holes, as that's worse than a few scuffs.

    Don't think they are meant to sit over the door rubber like in the second pic though, you'd get more rattles from this too.
    Last edited by G-rig; 02-05-2010 at 07:44 AM.

  5. #25
    Quote Originally Posted by xblode View Post
    I test fitted both the fronts & backs before applying the tape. I tried all sorts of ways but there's no other way they fit.

    They are generic scuff plates and as someone said in this thread, they don't really protect anything. I kept them on 'cause they do look good.
    I'm not going to get into an argument, cause you own a GTI with scuff plates & I only own a mk1 golf with rust!

    But I've fitted several sets of VW genuine scuff plates to mk5's & 6's & they are meant to cover up the plastic part & not the rubber door/body seal section.

    The back ones don't fit the best either due to the shape & curve of the plastic trim, but they aren't meant to cover the seal.

    IMHO they really are a waist of money anyway, cause for the price of the scuff plate stick on trims when they are damaged, its cheaper to replace the plastic trim if you don't have the protective scuff plates.


    Also on to entry protection. The black stick on sill protection cover to cover the paint isn't a really good option either, cause you never are in that area to damage. Rather the very lower edge of the sill where you actually drag your clothes across the painted edge of the body.

    Even if fitted right, its only a matter of time before the sill protection covers start to bubble anyway.

    Seen this numourous times, especially on EOS'

  6. #26
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    Quote Originally Posted by golfworx View Post
    Also on to entry protection. The black stick on sill protection cover to cover the paint isn't a really good option either, cause you never are in that area to damage. Rather the very lower edge of the sill where you actually drag your clothes across the painted edge of the body.
    I'd disagree with that. Women with heels (who don't care about cars) hit this area all the time.

    I'd still just protect the entire area with 3M Paint Protection Film if you actually care about protecting anything.
    I think it's already been established that those GTI metal scuff plates are purely for looks, not function.

  7. #27
    Quote Originally Posted by coreying View Post
    I'd disagree with that. Women with heels (who don't care about cars) hit this area all the time.

    I'd still just protect the entire area with 3M Paint Protection Film if you actually care about protecting anything.
    I think it's already been established that those GTI metal scuff plates are purely for looks, not function.


    Can't be stuffed getting into a hissy fit over plastic/stainless trim & scrathes.

    Got better & more important info to read & catch up on



    I only see the cars day in & day out so I don't really know too much about it.
    Last edited by Oneofthegreats; 02-05-2010 at 08:02 PM.

  8. #28
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    These look a bit better IMO:


  9. #29
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    A strip of ppf is good for the horizontal section on the boot hatch area. All you need.

  10. #30
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    I've seen the ones xblode have for sale on ebay too, and they are meant as a cosmetic mod more than anything, so the placement over the plastic trim is correct and intended to be. I've yet to find these for other VW models. I bought a set for my Jetta and they cover the paintwork/metal, not the plastic. Cheap as chips compared to dealer prices, so it's a no brainer.
    '09 Jetta 1.4 TSI 7spd DSG in Platinum Gray

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