logo
Life with an old Porsche 911 GT3 RS: how should you protect the paint?

Life with an old Porsche 911 GT3 RS: how should you protect the paint?

Top Gear03-07-2025
Ricci's Garage
In an unexpected move, Mark has decided to look after one of his cars... specifically, the 991 Skip 3 photos in the image carousel and continue reading
Renowned photographer Mark has been working with TopGear for many, many years. When not taking photos he's buying inappropriate cars. Here he shares his addiction with the world
In a very rare turn of events, I've spent this month doing something quite sensible: I've decided to look after one of the cars I already own. A few years ago I bought a 991 GT3 RS. Within three months I took great pride in doubling its mileage and using it for every journey possible, be that the school run or taking the dog to the vet, which does require popping out the fire extinguisher first.
Advertisement - Page continues below
There was also once where my daughter left her coat in the footwell after going to the park. This in itself wasn't an issue, however the several snails she'd picked up and placed in her pockets later would be. This only came to light the following day when several trails were spotted across the dashboard, something Porsche's R&D department never factored in.
I never found those snails, but it did provide a necessary wake-up call that I should probably look after the RS a bit better. Over that time several wheels were now chipped, the paint had to be corrected and the interior – aside from harbouring snails – was becoming quite scuffed. Before I could do any further damage, I looked into the world of PPF (paint protective film) to see if it would be worth the cost in the long run. I've never had any PPF on any car before, and my only past experience was seeing god awful installs that resembled clingfilm being used rather than protective film. You might like
After a bit of research I settled on a company called XPEL for a few key reasons. Firstly, it's been around for a very long time – 1997 in fact – and as such it's built up a decent selection of products depending on what budget and what kind of protection you're after. But what really impressed me with XPEL is the huge range of car makes and models it has on file.
Rather than drape a gigantic sheet of film over a car and hope for the best, XPEL has templates stored within its database specific to individual cars that allows individual panels to be cut and wrapped with minimal waste. Not only does this save money by cutting down the amount of film needed, but it also provides a much cleaner look as each panel's protective film is precisely cut to shape making it incredibly difficult to spot whether it's even had PPF applied.
Advertisement - Page continues below
For my GT3, I settled on XPEL's Ultimate Plus range which boasts more features than just protection against paint damage. The film also protects against UV exposure, but also contaminants like bird muck that will actually burn into your paintwork if not removed leaving long term damage. It will also 'heal' itself apparently, which is activated by the sun's heat meaning it'll actively reduce swirl marks and light scratches on the film every time it's heated up.
PPF is a bit like buying decent tyres for your car. It's not always the most exciting thing to spend money on, nor is it immediately noticeable. But it's also one of those things which should – touch wood – save you more money in the long term than the initial cost. I know I can't be trusted to properly look after any car I own, so having XPEL do a lot of that hard work for me does give me some peace of mind.
Thank you for subscribing to our newsletter. Look out for your regular round-up of news, reviews and offers in your inbox.
Get all the latest news, reviews and exclusives, direct to your inbox.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Chinese cars will take over as Britain's best sellers
Chinese cars will take over as Britain's best sellers

Auto Express

time23 minutes ago

  • Auto Express

Chinese cars will take over as Britain's best sellers

If you're after an accurate insight into the winners and losers doing battle in Britain's new-car showrooms in 2025, look no further than the industry figures covering the period from 1 January to 30 June. They've just been released and, to my mind, reveal crucially important buying trends that indicate the new direction of travel among paying customers in the UK. Like never before, buyers appear to be deserting some traditional brands and countries, and gravitating towards alternative car makers and vehicle-producing nations. Advertisement - Article continues below Italy is one victim of the shift. Fiat, Abarth and Maserati sales are, respectively, down 24, 55 and 38 per cent so far in 2025. True, Alfa Romeo is up 50 per cent, but this is from a very low base. Brits are still buying an average of just seven Alfas a day. As for French brands, Citroen is down 41 per cent, DS 64. Peugeot is doing much better, with a 40 per cent rise, Renault is up 16 and Alpine has jumped 49. Sales for South Korea's Genesis, Hyundai and Kia are rising. But for most Japanese firms, they're sliding. Only two of its small brands – Lexus (up nine) and Mazda (up 34) – have improved. Skip advert Advertisement - Article continues below Of the Germans, Audi is down 18 per cent, BMW six and Mercedes seven. But Volkswagen is up 13 and Porsche has improved by five, thereby overtaking volume brands Citroen, Fiat and Suzuki, with Honda and SEAT likely to be passed in the coming months. More importantly as far as Britain and its workers are concerned, the rise and rise of Porsche and its 9,531 sales in the first six months of 2025 compares with just 1,725 for arch-rival Jaguar (down 84 per cent), which hasn't sold a single new car for months. Ineos is down 10, while Land Rover and MINI are up seven and two respectively. Low-volume Bentley (up 12) is now the fastest-growing (in percentage terms) British car firm. Advertisement - Article continues below But the most significant performers in the UK from January to June have been China and its car makers. Dramatic examples include BYD, whose sales are 568 per cent higher than this time last year, thereby enabling it to overtake countless firms from Britain, mainland Europe, South Korea, North America and Japan (Mazda included). Sales for Jaecoo and Omoda have skyrocketed in 2025 from zero to several thousand each. Also just starting from scratch are Leapmotor and XPeng, who are both already selling hundreds of new models, with sales of thousands, then tens of thousands, planned. Skywell has just landed here, too. And in recent days there's been official confirmation that the Geely and Chery brands are also en route to Blighty. The next logical step is for China to take over as the nation that tops the UK's new-car sales chart. With its resources and vehicles at the right retail prices, it's not a case of if Chinese cars collectively take over as the best sellers in Britain. It's when. Did you know you can sell your car through Auto Express ? We'll help you get a great price and find a great deal on a new car, too . Find a car with the experts Renault 5 Monte Carlo Edition pays homage to the Clio Williams Renault 5 Monte Carlo Edition pays homage to the Clio Williams The Renault 5 Monte Carlo Edition has been created by Dutch company Re-volve and is limited to just 25 units New Xiaomi YU7 2025 review: a world-beating new EV to worry the establishment New Xiaomi YU7 2025 review: a world-beating new EV to worry the establishment BMW or Mercedes would do anything to keep the new Xiaomi YU7 from sale in the UK and Europe, and this is why Range Rover's secret mid-size EV: Inside its £500m factory Range Rover's secret mid-size EV: Inside its £500m factory We take an exclusive look inside JLR's revamped Liverpool site as the brand gears up for EV production

China's Zeekr says it did not sell or register zero-mileage used cars
China's Zeekr says it did not sell or register zero-mileage used cars

Reuters

time23 minutes ago

  • Reuters

China's Zeekr says it did not sell or register zero-mileage used cars

BEIJING, July 20 (Reuters) - Chinese automotive firm Zeekr (ZK.N), opens new tab said in a statement on Sunday that used cars described in media reports as having zero mileage were exhibition cars that were insured, but it did not sell or register them. The company has set up a team to investigate and make improvements, Zeekr said, adding that it opposed the sale of zero-mileage used cars. On Saturday, Reuters and state-backed China Securities Journal newspaper had reported that Zeekr had insured cars before selling them to buyers, inflating sales.

Disgusted locals living nightmare as 'blood red' gunge rains down from giant incinerator used to cremate zoo animals and beached whales
Disgusted locals living nightmare as 'blood red' gunge rains down from giant incinerator used to cremate zoo animals and beached whales

Daily Mail​

timean hour ago

  • Daily Mail​

Disgusted locals living nightmare as 'blood red' gunge rains down from giant incinerator used to cremate zoo animals and beached whales

Campaigners are demanding a factory causing a 'gut-wrenching stench' in a city centre by burning diseased and dead animals be closed down. The refinery plant, in Bradford, West Yorkshire, turns livestock, zoo animals and even beached whales, into biofuels. But by-products billowing from the factory chimneys create a rancid cloud over the area, coating cars with a thick greasy residue, making people physically sick, and even killing off vegetation. Food businesses claim the fetid reek is driving away customers and a petition has been launched calling on Bradford Council to immediately suspend operations at the P. Waddington Animal By-Product Processing Plant. One trader took samples of the detritus raining down from the white vapour belching from the Waddington stacks for lab analysis - it contained bone, hair and fat. Residents claim breathing in the vile particles of animal waste is making them ill. Motor trader Sadeeq Sharif, 53, has a business directly next to the plant, and is constantly having to clean his cars from the falling tiny globules. 'The stuff falls white at first, but over the days and when it gets water on it, it turns a rusty, blood-red colour,' said Mr Sharif, who has run his business Sultania Motors beside the factory for more than 15 years. Mechanic Thomas Wizla believes he has been suffering with stomach issues and unexplained weight loss due to the debris being pumped into the air through by the refinery plant 'I have a convertible car and I'm scared to park it outdoors, because of the fabric roof, and if that gets destroyed it'll cost me six grand. 'The problem has got worse in recent years. Sometimes you can't bear the smell, and you have to go inside. 'Customers have been known to dump their cars and just run, they don't want to be here one second longer than they have to. 'The grime just builds up on the car bodyworks and windows, it is a constant battle to clean it off. 'The smell from the refinery gets that bad some days that we can hardly work and stand here. When some trucks come you cannot be here, it is that nasty, it's a gut-wrenching stench.' The Waddington plant has been in operation since 1947, and before that was an abattoir, but locals say the problem has gotten worse in recent years. Animal carcasses from across Britain are brought by lorry to the site, including roadkill, zoo animals, diseased farm animals, the waste from the livestock food industry and whales washed up on the nation's seashores. Skin and hide is also treated at the premises. Offal are also trucked to the factory and there have been a number of spills when rancid animal guts have ended up on the road. On one occasion a spill of fat caused a car to skid and crash, according to locals. 'A lot of the trucks aren't from here, they are foreigners. The trucks have foreign number plates on, and the drivers don't know the language and they are trying to look for the place,' said Mr Sharif. 'Waddington's spilt so much one day that they had to close the road and bring in industrial cleaners. 'This should not be taking place in the city centre. The whole place is manky. 'It is going 24 hours a day, it never shuts down.' Thomas Wizla, 47, runs TW Autos, a few doors down from Mr Sharif. 'The smell gets really bad, especially over the last two-and-a-half years,' said Mr Wizla, pointing to the mucky residue on his cars. 'I have had a problem with my stomach for the last years. I have lost 10kg and been to the doctor a number of times. I'm sure it is linked to that plant. 'I am normally a fit, healthy person, but its just here making me sick. 'I have been to Waddington's to complain, but they say it is "nothing to do with us". 'I have taken the stuff that is falling down from the chimneys, which is white at first and then turns rusty-coloured. I have sent those samples to an independent laboratory and he sends me a report. 'What does it say? - hair, bone, and antibiotics.' The report cost Mr Wizla £500 for the lab report, six months ago. 'Last week we had two ladies leaving their car, and straight away one of them dashed to the toilet to throw up because of the smell,' he said. 'The other lady went to be sick after that.' Mr Wizla also pointed out the trees, brambles, grasses and flowers on an embankment directly downwind from the chimneys - everything was brown and shrivelled, whereas normal summer greenery was either side. Viktor Kotenko, 60, also works nearby. 'The smell is very, very bad, it is just horrible,' said Mr Kotenko. 'Sometimes it comes down like rain and you can taste it on your tongue and on your lips - it is a sweet taste. 'And when you wash your face it you can feel it.' Geoff Bonham, 68, has been in the area for more than 30 year and he says the problem has got worse over the last few years. 'Waddington's say that it is not them causing the smell or being responsible for the bits falling from the sky, but it obviously is,' said Mr Bonham. 'They used to say the smell was from a nearby chicken factory, but that's not the case. 'The stuff is so thick and greasy that if you put your windscreen wipers on you can't see. 'I've been complaining to environmental health for ages, but they say its not detrimental to health. 'But I've been away in hospital for three months on an unrelated matter, but when I have come back my sinuses are going and I have a sore throat already. 'The emissions from the plant can be the only reason for my sinus problem and sore throat.' Mr Bonham said the company, which still goes by the name Waddington but was taken over a few years ago by JG Pears, spills offal on the road. Mr Bonham said the company, which was very busy at the time of the foot and mouth outbreak, has daily lorry loads of animal carcasses, and recently took delivery of a whale that had washed up in Whitby. A petition set up on has more than 1,600 signatures, with people saying they are always having to keep their windows shut to ward off the stench. Locals are so enraged by the issue a community meeting was held last week. One local who signed the petition said: 'On a daily basis I watch my elderly mother who suffers from rheumatoid arthritis struggling to close the windows because of the daily toxic assault by P Waddington. 'Enough is enough it's time this soul-destroying site is closed.' Another signatory, who volunteers at the nearby mosque wrote: 'It felt like being poisoned! 'I volunteer at the mosque opposite the factory, and yesterday the stench was so overwhelmingly terrible and offensive, I ran inside for the first time in my life to close the windows, dropped my plans to water the plants from the children's vegetable garden and literally ran to the car holding my breath. 'I have never smelled anything that terrible in my life, and I am not exaggerating.' Councillor Ismail Uddin, who represents Bowling and Barkerend Ward where the rendering plant is located, is backing the petition. 'There are many food outlets on Leeds Road, just beside Waddington's, and many owners say customers think the bad smell is coming from them,' said Cllr Uddin. 'Bradford Council has launched a "Live Leeds Road" campaign, but the awful smell is not helping. 'On some days the stench can be smelt at the new Bradford Interchange bringing tourists and visitors to our city. 'The first impression they get is that the place stinks.' Members of the Leeds Road Hindu temple have submitted a letter to Bradford Council highlighting the 'intolerable' situation and 'foul smell' which they said visiting dignitaries had commented on. Tariq Mahmood, who runs the Mahmood's burger shop near the factory, said: 'Our business attracts people from outside and we are investing a lot of money into the area. 'It reflects really negatively on us as a city.' The petition, entitled 'Stop the Noxious Fumes from this Animal Carcass Burning Plant in Bradford!' reads: 'We petition Bradford Council for the immediate suspension of operations at the P. Waddington Animal By-Product Processing Plant, located at 54 Buck Street, BD3 9LP. 'This suspension should remain in effect until a comprehensive and independent investigation into the plant's adherence to environmental guidelines and its impact on public health is conducted.' It outlines the below concerns and demands. 1. Potential Health Risks: Persistent community reports and preliminary research indicate that emissions from the plant could pose various health risks, including respiratory and gastrointestinal problems, as well as mental health issues. 2. Environmental Impact: There is concern about the potential for emissions from the plant to exceed the guidelines set by the Environmental Agency. Recent assessments suggest that they may be up to 5000% in excess of the 1.5 OU/m3 limitation (Odour Units), raising serious concerns about the plant's impact on local air quality and the broader environment. 3. Lack of Transparency and Oversight: Questions have been raised about the accuracy and impartiality of the self reporting of the plant's emissions, particularly considering the potential for underreporting of volatile organic compounds. This underscores the need for enhanced regulatory oversight and independent verification. Demands: 1. Immediate suspension of operations at the Waddington Plant pending an independent investigation into its adherence to environmental guidelines and its overall health and environmental impacts. 2. A thorough review of the plant's compliance with environmental regulations and guidelines. 3. Inclusion of community stakeholders in future decisions regarding the plant's operations, ensuring transparency and accountability. 'We urge the Bradford Council to take swift and decisive action in response to these concerns, prioritizing the health and safety of our community,' the petition reads. A spokesperson for Bradford Council said: 'An investigation is currently ongoing into Waddingtons which has not concluded, therefore we are unable to comment at this time.' PJ Pears, the factory's parent company, said: 'We understand the concerns of some of the residents near the P Waddington installation. We make great efforts to minimise odours beyond the site boundary and operate within the strict requirements of our environmental permit and odour management plan. 'As we have said previously, we are open to meeting with community representatives to discuss this matter further. But up till now, no one has contacted us about this. 'Regarding the petition, some of the information given on the petition webpage is not correct. It is important that discussions about our installation are grounded in the facts. 'Most significantly, it says that 'Recent assessments suggest that they may be up to 5000% in excess of the 1.5 OU/m3 limitation (Odour Units).' This is based on modelling assuming there is zero abatement of odour and emissions in operation. This has been assessed to give an absolute worst-case scenario to measure our abatement systems against. It would not be possible to operate the plant under this scenario and this would be a breach of our permit. 'Under the Environmental Permitting Regulations, facilities must use the Best Available Techniques (BAT) to prevent or minimise emissions and environmental impact. Our permit was granted because the installation uses modern technology and operating procedures to minimise odour in line with current BAT standards. 'The petition also expressed concerns about a 'Lack of Transparency and Oversight.' Environmental health officers from Bradford Metropolitan District Council regularly inspect and audit the installation to ensure compliant operations. All of this carried out to UK regulatory standards. 'Finally, we would like to clarify that it is not an 'animal carcass burning plant'. It is an animal by-product rendering plant. It carefully uses heat to convert animal material not suitable for human consumption into safe, reusable resources, such as biofuels. Facilities like ours play a vital role in making livestock production sustainable and in preventing animal disease outbreaks.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store