Choose your Automotive paint color for your 2006 Volkswagen C-Trek

Restore Your 2006 Volkswagen C-Trek Finish In Two Steps

Select Your Volkswagen's Color (Step One)

AutomotiveTouchup paint products are custom mixed to perfectly match the color of your 2006 Volkswagen C-Trek using a basecoat/clearcoat system just like factory specs. To insure a proper match, you’ll need to know your vehicle’s color code, so you can find it on the chart below. The paint code is normally located in the back compartment panel in the trunk. Click here for Volkswagen paint code location diagrams and label examples.

Chip Color Codes Color Description
2006 Volkswagen C-Trek Touch Up Paint | Bolero Beige Metallic K6, LR1V, R1V K6, LR1V, R1V Bolero Beige Metallic
2006 Volkswagen C-Trek Touch Up Paint | Phantom Black Pearl L8, L8L8, LZ9Y, TWLEL, Z9Y L8, L8L8, LZ9Y, TWLEL, Z9Y Phantom Black Pearl
2006 Volkswagen C-Trek Touch Up Paint | Polarweiss LY9H, P1, P1P1, Y9H LY9H, P1, P1P1, Y9H Polarweiss

 

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Why The Two-Step Paint System?

Your 2006 Volkswagen C-Trek is painted at the factory with a high quality basecoat/clearcoat system. This two-step paint system consists of step one, the basecoat, which is your car’s actual color, and step two, the clearcoat, the specially formulated clear paint that protects the base color and provides the luster and deep shine your vehicle came with when new. AutomotiveTouchup products faithfully reproduce your vehicle manufacturer’s basecoat/clearcoat system.

Here's what our customers are saying about our Touch Up Paint:

Jesse P, owner of a 2007 Volkswagen New Beetle Conv from Metter, GA

I was more than satisfied with your touch up paint for my wife's 07 Beetle convertible. The paint matched the original perfectly, went on easy.. Good stuff, I would highly recommend your product.. Thanks! JP

William N, owner of a 2007 Volkswagen Eos from Wyomissing, PA

A perfect match three times in a row, for three different color cars; it's hard to ask for more. Since I don't restore or work on cars in any way for a living, I have modest skills and facilities, so the quality of the results I have obtained is quite impressive. Interestingly, I prefer to not use the clear coat, even though the company recommends it; it seems as if the original clear coat must undergo more weathering than the underlying color itself, so the freshly applied clear coat is slightly more reflective and looks "newer" than the rest of the panel. The remedy here of course is to paint an entire panel to the seam line, but that's far more of a project than I would ever want to get involved with. The basecoat alone has been just fine in my three different small touchups.

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