Slicks Graphics Presents the Ultimate Guide to Vehicle Wraps

This article breaks down all of the most important factors that go into buying vehicle wrap with complete peace of mind with the help of Slicks Graphics, a commercial marketing solution that has been helping businesses grow for over 10 years.

Van Wraps by Slicks

​​​Car Wraps have been around for a few decades now, while the technology behind building these graphics have evolved tremendously over the last decade alone. This article was put together to highlight great points to consider when looking for a new vehicle wrap for a business.

Justifying A Vehicle Wrap

At this point, almost everyone has seen or at least heard of a vehicle wrap to some degree or another. Vinyl wraps are almost everywhere in today's busy world of huge graphics and ultimate coverage applying films to all different types of vehicles including cars, trucks, trailers, buses and even smooth and textured wall applications. On the way to the store, look out for really colorful vehicles that send large format messages to their audiences through fat graphics that stand out from the plain Jane solid color cars passing by. There may be surprise with how there is not one errand a person can run without seeing a handful of vehicle wraps and trailer wraps passing by.  This is because it simply works.

Why are business owners turning to vehicle wraps?

Commercial vehicles have an obligation to transport either products, passengers, or even employees to various job sites each day they want to continue to stay in business. Why not stand out in this process, extending thousands of impressions to potential new clients through a vibrant new vehicle wrap. This opportunity is the ultimate way for a business to accelerate finding new leads and creating opportunities. Take a local plumber for example.  A smaller operation with one service truck that's newer to the plumbing industry just getting started as the business networks with all of its friends and family to find new plumbing jobs. Imagine in this situation, this outfit has a job at a location where hundreds of locals pass by the location of this job each and every day with an average of three days to complete a plumbing project. If there is nothing on this blank white van, then how likely is this plumber going to find new work simultaneously to working on someone's toilet, for example? If this plumber gets their new van wrapped with a catchy, colorful design, then while that van sits in their customer's driveway, each day all those locals pass by, taking notice to this new plumbing company and the services the new van wrap is promoting to these people who when least expected may also need or know someone that needs to find a plumber.  This cycle continuously helps local business owners promote and build market share within a company. Unlike traditional billboards that carry monthly reoccurring bills to rent a space, wrap owners get to own a mobile billboard.

How Much Does A Vehicle Wrap Cost?

Depending on the type of vehicle wrap, the cost does fluctuate to a degree along with the grade of the film purchased. To better explain this, let's look at a couple of different examples. First, consider a Ford Transit Connect, a smaller utility van in comparison to the full-size transit. Paired with a high-performance wrap and a new design built from one of Slicks' creative designers, a customer would be looking at roughly $2,200.00 before tax without any roof coverage or bumper coverage. This would mean outside of the usually already black textured plastic bumpers (not wrap friendly) or the roof that most potential customers would never see anyway, everything else on the vehicle would be completely covered in this new vehicle wrap. For DOT regulations and driver safety, wrap companies are not allowed to cover the front driver, passenger or windshield areas of the vehicle. All other glass areas can be covered with an optional perforated window graphic film. Larger vans with a wheelbase around 136'' holding similar coverage run closer to the $3,200-$4,500.00 range depending on the final size and coverage of that vehicle.

Our second example is calculated on a Ford Focus. Believe it or not, not only will the painted bumpers require coverage to avoid clashing with the new design, but so will the door handles and most likely mirrors and even the roof, as these cars sit much lower to the ground allowing most standing civilians to be able to see the entire car. This ends up adding time and material to the cost of this car wrap, bringing the average cost up to the $2,800.00-$3,400.00 range using a high-performance film.

There are alternative films with an intermediate grade performance guarantee for those looking to save money, but customers start to sacrifice performance to compound curves like handles and bumpers, along with age expectancy, as these films typically last half of the lifetime of the high-performance vehicle wrap films.

How Long Does It Last?

It's first important to understand the difference of the two films' make-up (cast versus calendered). High performance films are made from a cast vinyl, while intermediate films are made from calendared vinyl. A cast film is made by pouring the PVC based film into a rolling mold, enhanced with plasticizers to improve the film's overall conforming function. This allows the natural state of the cooled plastic vinyl to be 100% at the start of the production process and final installation process. The advantage promotes itself when an installer is trying to wrap something like a door, where the low spot in the door handle area requires the film to be moderately stretched into a low point for complete door coverage. Without a cast base film, the vinyl would start to shrink naturally and pop up creating an air pocket, which eventually cracks, collects water/moisture and starts to fail in a complete section on the vehicle wrap. Cast vinyl wraps typically last 3-5 years and can easily surpass 5 years with extra care and maintenance.

Calendared films allow typically a 20-25% savings on the original cost of a high-performance vehicle wrap, but these films are made like a pizza. The calendared film is stretched to the size of the raw material roll Slicks will then print the customer's graphics on and install this intermediate vehicle wrap with. Not only is this film only rated for 1-2 years, but the failure rate in recessed channels or compound curves on the vehicle is much higher than a traditional high-performance vehicle wrap.

In Summary

The opportunities are endless with a new vehicle wrap. Vehicle wraps have changed and will continue to change the marketing potential of a business, so give Slicks Graphics a call today at 215-736-8000 to get started, or visit them on the web for more information at https://www.slicksgraphics.com. Want More Business? Check out the custom signs division or the well-established website marketing division at Slicks Graphics, Inc.

Source: Slicks Graphics

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