Ding King Dent Repair Kit
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| Price: | $23.84 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over $25. Details |
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Ships from and sold by Smart As Seen on TV Products
5 new or used available from $15.05
Average customer review:Product Description
Ding King was originally designed for technicians to remove dents in difficult to reach areas. It soon became The Body Shop's Secret Tool. With Ding King, anyone can remove dents and dings from any car in a matter of minutes. It's Easy! Simply glue a dent pulling tab to the center of the dent. Place pulling bridge over dent pulling tab. Twist turning knob onto dent pulling tab and twist until it pops. Remove the glue with rubbing alcohol (not included). Ding King Repair Kit Includes: 1-Pulling Bridge, 1-Hot Glue Gun, 2-Dent Pulling Tabs, 3-Sticks Of OEM Safe Glue, 1-Turning Knob.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #163 in Automotive
- Brand: Ding King
- Model: as seen on tv
- Dimensions: 6.00" h x 5.00" w x 10.00" l, 3.00 pounds
Features
- Simply glue a dent pulling tab to the center of the dent
- Place pulling bridge over dent pulling tab
- Twist turning knob onto dent pulling tab and twist till it pops
- Remove the glue with Ding King Solution or use any basic household rubbing alcohol
Customer Reviews
Worth every penny, and not a cent more
I had a small but noticeable dent in the fender and I wanted a cheap way to mostly fix it before committing to a full body shop. Dent King can do some jobs, but not all. For what it does, it's a pretty good product. If you fall into the category where it can help, it's worth it.
It's a "do it yourself" dent repair kit for your car. It "pulls" dents back out and is a fairly good solution for dents that ONLY require pulling "back out". This includes door and shopping cart dings you'd get in a parking lot. It has to be minor, no larger than a grapefruit, and only cosmetic dent damage to a metal panel where there is NO crease. It does not address scratches.
The ideal dent for the Dent King to repair is damage from a blunt object, like a rounded plastic corner of a shopping car dinged the middle of your door and left an indentation that is small, did not cause creases, not on a crease.
I think this is but one tool of an arsenal of tools that body shops use. That means, it is only applicable to a specific type of damage. If the dent looks like it just needs to be "sucked back out a bit", then the Dent King probably can help.
Clean the surface with the included cleaner, which smells like regular rubbing alcohol. Use the supplied glue gun and special glue sticks and dab the melted glue onto the end of the "puller" stick and adhere to the dent where you want to pull it. Allow it to cool, then straddle the "puller stick" with the 2 point brace/bridge, and screw on the tightener to the puller stick. This will pull on the dent via the stick until the glue pops off. This action "snaps" the dent out a bit; depending upon how much force the glue was able to supply. This relies on a good paint job (OEM), as it's essentially pulling on the surface of the paint.
It ends up you will need to do this multiple times to slowly work out the dent
I can still see my dents but they are greatly reduced; that is, for the ones that the Dent King could be applied to. I don't think "good as new" will ever be achieved with Dent King, but it definitely can reduce "ugly ding" to "little annoying ding".
This is one of those products that is just a tool, and really is more dependent upon the skill of the operator. For the price paid, it delivered value for its cost. But that's it.
Works AS ADVERTISED, read directions guys
I bought this kit to remove a small but very noticeable dent in our 07 Jetta in the rear quarter panel. Purchased at a local auto store for 20 bucks as the dent wasn't large enough to warrant a trip to the body shop.
Following the directions in the box, I was able to pull the dent in two tries to about 90-95% of its original shape. A small depression is still noticeable, but the Ding King states that this will probably be the case. Bottom line, for $20 this product works as advertised.
Now, there are several reviews here and on other sites that claim the Ding King did not work for them at all, citing various reasons. When you read the review, it's clear they did NOT follow the directions at all. I think if you follow the directions it will work as advertised, which means it will pull small dents out to about 90% of perfection without damaging your paint.
If the glue didn't stick to your car, you probably didn't use the solution to clean the paint surface first (nowhere does it tell you to sand your paint off as one reviewer suggested he tried). Another possibility is that you didn't wait for the proper temperature range. The instructions suggest you try between 50-80 degrees in the shade.
The glue gun worked fine for me, you squeeze the melted glue onto the plastic tab and immediately place over the dent, holding it there for 60 seconds as the directions say. Then wait at least 5 minutes, I waited about 10. Again, if you try to pull the dent without waiting then it probably won't work for you.
Proceed to pull the dent until the glue releases. In both of my pulls, the glue stayed on the car. I simply poured a little of the cleaning solution on the glue, then pulled slowly and used the included scraper to gently peel the glue up. It came off cleanly with no damage to my paint, both times.
If you don't follow the directions, how do you expect it to work? This product won't pull a dent 100%, but it will do a really good job of fixing it to about 90% or so if you just do what it tells you to. For $20, I'd use this product again.
:-) Better than expected
Usaully I avoid informercial products like the plague, any thing that needs that much convincing can't be worth the price. However, I was desperate to cut costs and bought one of these at auction. They run $8-19.50 plus shipping but can be had new for $17.50 plus shipping. I paid $8 +.
The infomercial says things like show room new, and I suppose that may be true under lab conditions with only certain kinds of dents. Here are my results.
Two dents first about size of grapefruit shallow with two points (small sharp dings) other large cucumber deeper with two points. Ding king will not work on points. First dent popped out great on first try, smooth with no waves, even the points were less pronounced only visible on close inspection. On the basis of that alone, it was well worth the cost. Second dent was less satisfying but that may be due to technique. The tool removed the dent but some waving visible but may be missed on cursury inspection. Was able to reduce one of the points with the knockdown tool but still visible. Possibly if I had worked from outter edges more slowly (distance wise) the waving would not be there. This dent took about 10-12 trys. This dent was also the least promising of repair considering depth, width and length. Even so, I may go back and try removing the waving with smaller applications of glue. Clean up took considerable effort and lots of Ding King solution (ie. Alcohol), not exactly like the infomercial either.
Conclusion... The repairs do NOT look show room new but definitely left vehicle looking a lot better and saleable. The Ding King will not work on sharp edged dents, it says so in the directions but don't remember the infomercial saying so. So beware. The Ding King solution is merely green alcohol, replacement glue sticks are outrageously expensive but... considering cost/benefit... worth it. So it makes a usefull addition to the garage tool kit.




