I stopped by Chuck's Corvette Clinic yesterday after finally getting my Hawaiʻi safety inspection at BMW of Honolulu after importing our i3 into Hawaiʻi from California in early July. Driving our i3 on Hawaiʻi's roads is now legal! Woohoo!
Chuck is probably about my age. He's been working on Corvettes and custom cars of all kinds in his WWII quonset hut for ~45 years. We bonded over stories of our past Corvette ownerships. However, despite his shop's name, he now drives a custom Ford Ranchero hotrod with a 428 Cobra-jet engine.
Chuck climbed up on the door sill of our i3 to get a better look at its roof. With his long Corvette painting experience (nice, professional paint booth in his shop), he saw no problem painting it Galvanic Gold Metallic (paint code C4Y to him). However, after confirming with me that our i3 is an EV, Chuck's local wife and business partner informed him that they don't work on EV's! Neither Chuck not I could understand why he painting the roof of our EV would be any different from painting the roof of a BMW M car with a CFRP roof. He told me that he would talk to his wife after I left and would call me later. After less than 10 minutes, I received a call informing me of the cost and telling me that I would be called during the second week of September to schedule the paint job. I'm cautiously optimistic that this will actually happen and that the result will be nice. This really shouldn't have been this difficult. Photos will be posted of the successful painting.