Atlanta man orders Chevy truck bumper on Temu and what gets delivered looks like a prank
Published on Jul 30, 2025 at 7:33 PM (UTC+4)
by Ben Thompson
Last updated on Jul 30, 2025 at 8:41 PM (UTC+4)
Edited by
Emma Matthews
This Atlanta man ordered a Chevy truck bumper on Temu, but what was delivered looked like a prank.
Cam’Ron Carter was left feeling buyer’s remorse when he first laid eyes upon this ‘boneless bumper’.
Undoubtedly, many of the millions that watched his unboxing on TikTok agreed.
But it turned out that he could turn the situation to his benefit.
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This Atlanta man was left stunned when he ordered a Chevy bumper
Cam’Ron Carter ordered a Chevy truck bumper from a Temu vendor, but was left stunned by what showed up.
‘I’m done with Temu dawg…fake bumper,” Carter wrote in his video caption.
One of his viewers described it as a ‘boneless bumper’, and that description was hard to argue with.

However, things began to improve in Carter’s follow-up videos, in which he laid it out in the sun, on the advice of many of his followers.
Once laid out, the bumper’s material had begun to relax, straighten, and formed a shape more accustomed to a truck bumper.
This is because bumpers sold online are often shipped compressed.
When made from thermoplastic materials like polypropylene or ABS plastic, they often regain their shape in the heat.

Once mounted on Carter’s Chevrolet truck, it looked fine.
“It’s holding up pretty good…it’s coming together,” he commented.
You can find a lot of unusual things on Temu
It seems like you can find most things on Temu these days.
That includes dirt bikes, one of which was put up against a counterpart from Amazon for a tough challenge.
There are also excavators, believe it or not.
But some people are happy to make do with sourcing the smaller parts from the site, in order to make bigger projects like this BMW M240i.

A lot of cool supercars have come into the world thanks to Temu.
One YouTuber used Temu parts to rebuild the ‘world’s cheapest McLaren’, while another built a whole car engine out of parts from the site.
Chris Slix has made a lot of use of the site for his McLaren project, which has been a bumpy ride to say the least.
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