Carbon fibre finish (1 Viewer)

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Joined
Jul 10, 2019
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Location
manchester uk
ive just removed all the plastic wood interior an gone for carbon fibre finish .Love it or hate it

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I don't want to s*** on your post, but your steering wheel is on the wrong side.
Don't knock it till you've tried it, some times it's good to be on the wrong side, your just being a wheelist, your wheelie prejudice 😄🇬🇧🎅🎄🤶
 
It’s hydro printing , they dip it into a carbon fibre type transfer then let dry then laquer. See on you tube
 
We are English so spelling must be right . Ha ha
Actually both right as in USA you spell in old English ie color where we are colour
 
Looks great, I was wondering how you got the pieces so perfect if this was vinyl wrap material, but water transfer makes sense. That's some impressive pattern alignment on your window switches, dead straight!
 
Spelled “fiber” wrong too 🤷🏻‍♂️
There is no difference in meaning between fiber and fibre. Fiber is the preferred spelling in American English, and fibre is preferred in all the other main varieties of English.

Both spellings are many centuries old, and neither spelling was clearly prevalent on either side of the Atlantic until the second half of the 18th century. This was a period in which many British educators began to consider it proper for English words of French and Latin origin to take their more French and Latin forms rather than their more Anglicized forms. Fibre is the French spelling of the word from which the English word is derived, so it was promoted as the standard spelling despite its being unphonetic. The belief that French and Latin should hold sway over English never had much traction in the post-independence United States, and while Americans also favored the French spelling through the 19th century, the more phonetic fiber steadily gained ground through that century until becoming the preferred form around 1910. :santa: 😄:D
 
There is no difference in meaning between fiber and fibre. Fiber is the preferred spelling in American English, and fibre is preferred in all the other main varieties of English.

Both spellings are many centuries old, and neither spelling was clearly prevalent on either side of the Atlantic until the second half of the 18th century. This was a period in which many British educators began to consider it proper for English words of French and Latin origin to take their more French and Latin forms rather than their more Anglicized forms. Fibre is the French spelling of the word from which the English word is derived, so it was promoted as the standard spelling despite its being unphonetic. The belief that French and Latin should hold sway over English never had much traction in the post-independence United States, and while Americans also favored the French spelling through the 19th century, the more phonetic fiber steadily gained ground through that century until becoming the preferred form around 1910. :santa: 😄:D
I merely stacking another corny joke on top of @Alibaster 's corny joke 😉
 

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