How picky are you with nicks, dings, and scratches?
Even though I am lucky enough to live in the suburbs of Long Island and don't have to worry about parking at my house, I work at a baseball park, where my past car has had 2 hit and runs... I learned my lesson this time around and park in bumble f**k. However, this has not saved me from a ding on my rear passenger side wheel well. It is right on the edge, probably from a baseball and there is no paint damage, I can feel the dent (pretty minor) from the back of the wheel well and it is right where the lip becomes flat and even with the front shiny part of the rim. My question is what would be the best thing to try to pop out the dent without bringing it somewhere?
A buddy of mine said a hairdryer for 2 minutes + holding compressed air can upside down on it until it pops should work, but I worry about spraying liquid nitrogen on my car... That can't be good for the paint. What about the butt of a screwdriver, or if you have any suggestions I'd be open to listening. Thanks!
Do not try any method your friend tells you about or those "As seen on TV" dent removal products. THE ONLY WAY TO REMOVE A DENT IS PDR. It cost me $75 and was well worth it. You drive a Benz man, get it done right 
I think I've changed my perspective on this: it's nearly impossible, and becomes quite costly (money and time to schedule PDR) to keep one's car absent of innocuous dings.
I think of it this way: these darn cars, which are moving objects, are on the road with other moving objects- of all kinds, in all kinds of driving conditions. Seemed every time I addressed a ding or two, a few weeks or months later...there's another! And they are usually small and barely noticable. And, I caught myself worrying so much sometimes, that I wouldn't drive: and that's NOT what a car is for. It's meant to be driven.
I am just over caring I think. Now, I just try to be reasonable, keep the car looking good and maintained, etc.
However, it can be a battle in my mind: right now I have a tiny tiny ding, or minor tiny depression, on the hood of my 15 year old CLK, which is in really nice condition. But honestly, it's friggin old, still looks good, and there's a bunch of other minor, yet reasonable with age and use - flaws. I'm thinking the car should be allowed to age gracefully. Thoughts?
Of course, if there's large dent or something...that's a different story.
Seems there's just better things I now do with my time these days than worry about a car to this anxious extent.

For me, there's got to be a reasonable tolerance threshold for this stuff!
Last edited by johnnr; Oct 16, 2014 at 11:45 PM.
ldtCapitan, Is that place any good for full details? I saw them online but you know how it is in Miami to find reputable places.
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