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Emblem Removal

29K views 24 replies 17 participants last post by  josuet  
#1 ·
So while my Sorento was in the shop having repairs done from an accident, I asked if they would leave the KIA emblems off as I was going to replace them with the K emblems.

Just confirming in this thread that you must take off the bumper to remove the front emblem as it is held on with clips molded into the back of the emblem. Not a hard process really, ten minutes or so to remove all the screws, unplug the fogs and camera, all set.


The rear emblem is a little more straight forward as it's just held on with 3M double sided tape. There are a pair of centering pins on the back of the badge so sawing it through with fishing line might not be the easiest option. We used a heat gun to soften the tape up and carefully pried it up, working around the edges with a plastic body panel tool. Be sure to use masking tape on the surrounding paintwork so as not to scratch anything.

In the end, I really like them over the standard KIA badges.
 

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#3 ·
I have a 2017 Kia Sorento SXL V6 AWD and wanted to change the front and back emblems.

I studied the various helpful posts on Kia-Forums.com and ordered the Loden C emblems. The rear emblem was straightforward to remove with a heat gun, 1/4 wide plastic strapping, plastic interior moulding removal tools, tar & grease remover, paper towels and lot's of elbow grease. Took me about an hour to get all the old adhesive off.

The front emblem was much more of challenge. I considered removing the front bumper but that was way more complexity than I wanted to get into.

My solution was to cut up the factory emblem in pieces using a Dremel tool with a cutoff wheel for plastic. Working carefully, I made shallow cuts starting at the center and stopping about 3/8 inch from the edge of the emblem to avoid damaging the grill. Run the Dremel at medium speed so it doesn't melt the plastic. A lot of fine dust but no smoke. I checked the depth of my cut frequently and learned the factory emblem is convex (curves outward) and you easily feel and hear when the wheel cuts through. I was careful to *barely* cut through the emblem.

Once I'd cut through a section of emblem (stopping 3/8" from the edges), I inserted a flat blade screwdriver in the saw kerf and twisted to crack the plastic through to the edge. Once the emblem is cracked in two vertically, it was loose and easy enough to cut out in pieces. The four plastic mounting tabs come out easily when it's only holding an isolated section of emblem with lots of wiggle room.

Total time to cut off the front grill factory emblem was less than 15 minutes!

I tossed the cut up emblem in the trash but thought better of it and fished several pieces out to share my story with the forum.

The 1st photo is the Dremel tool, cut off wheel for plastic and pieces of the factory emblem.
The 2nd photo shows a piece of the concave emblem and undamaged front grill.
The 3rd photo is the new Loden C emblem and heat gun to warm the adhesive before mounting.
 

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#13 ·
Another question...if the front emblem is just held on with clips, what are the chances that strong fishing line (I have 100# test braided) could be slid under the ends and pulled straight out, popping off the emblem? Is there any sort of adhesive holding it on, or does the factory just line up the centering pin and pop the emblem in place?
 
#18 ·
:ROFLMAO:

Not really a military person, but now that you mentioned it... who wants to be KIA?

I initially thought why are people going thru so much trouble switching out emblems... Now I want to change that stupid emblem too.
 
#19 ·
With the new official emblems out, Kia (or somebody) could make a good deal of money offering up kits to change over the old emblems. Dealers could make a few bucks if they offered to do it, etc. I would hire them to do it for sure.
 
#22 ·
Just FYI, the actual spelling based on the Korean pronunciation should be "Gia" or "Ghia".

When I started working in Korea in 1997, the name of the international airport in Seoul was called Kimpo, and with a revision of the English translations it became Gimpo.


Gimpo International Airport (Korean: 포국제공항; Hanja: 金浦國際空港), commonly known as Gimpo Airport (IATA: GMP, SEL, ICAO: RKSS) (formerly rendered in English as Kimpo International Airport),



Ghia Motors = 기아 자동차