Hi guys! I been a finisher for most of my adult life. Paint is a hard subject. It can go as easy as pie, or end up a sloppy embarrassing mess. Even the pros redo jobs all the time. The products today are VERY finicky about what they go over and what goes over them. Wax, silicone, polish, all that stuff will cause a ton of problems. The ColoRite stuff is all high tech polyurethanes. They are the MOST unpridictable and hard to control. The different steps, base, color,clear, has to have a barrier coat in between, which, even with 30 or so years under my spray gun, I didn't know... they failed to tell me. Nothing I did would stop fisheyes, crawling, and orange peel. I was missing the barrier coats! Old school lacquer is my favorite for touch-ups., but you gotta find a color matching guy who knows how to "eye-match" your color. Then, a clear poly topcoat. There is NO WAY anyone can match your paint over the internet! They gotta take a known color formula, and customize it to YOUR particular finish on an actual piece off your project. Every paint job is different in color, even if it came out of the same can! Direction,distance,mix, fade,etc. are all going to affect your color. Touch up pens are ok for dabbing here and there to seal up a chip, but there is alot of work involved in making a boo-boo completely dissappear! Some will post how great thier chip repair went, I assure you, they were either lucky, or they knew what they were doing!! The idea is to get the chip filled and LEVEL with the surrounding area, with color, absolutely perfectly, and then clear it. I have alot of posters ask for my help because the see what I do, but are insulted when I tell em "unless you want to pay for the time and materials, I can't help ya!" It's just not as easy as it looks, and wingers and trikers are VERY picky, so there is no easy out! And just look at the prices of a pint of poly!!!! Just bite the bullet, get her done proffessionally, and maybe get some 3M ChipGuard applied to your problem areas. It's a computer cut film that, when installed will protect your paint from chips, and is near invisible! Now one word to all, if the trike kit installer mixed the materials wrong, or contaminated them, the paint may be brittle, and the chipping will get worse as the paint continues to cure over many months. Most urethanes, if mixed properly, will resist chipping. They are kinda "rubbery" when cured up. Not brittle like hard plastic. I hope this helps, and you can usually go into any body shop supplier and get a ton of help. They want you to drop 4-5 hundred bucks on materials! jimsjinx