v8hotrodboy
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Wash it, then clay it, then a good polish, then wax it with Collinite 915. Not a 5 min job but its much easier to clean afterwards, and it will shine for months!
If you start playing with cutting compounds and clay bars be careful. A bit too much pressure and you will get swirls and marks like you wouldn't believe. As for wax look for something with a high carnauba content.
Not wishing to start a bunfight but to someone who hasn't touched this subject before it would pay to be careful. I don't do detailing. I am a painter so know a thing or two about polishing and paint defectsNot a problem at all, IF you follow my steps, because as I state, firstly keep it well lubed with detailing spray and secondly, more importantly you clay your car BEFORE YOU SWIRL REDUCE IT with the polisher..... Thats the whole idea.
You need to keep the clay well turned and always wet. Then after it feels real nice and smooth move onto the swirth reduction and polishing. Been following this process for years and never ruined a car yet..
BUT, I would always advice a beginner to go for a Dual Action polisher rather than a rotory as they are much more forgiving and less lightly to burr through the paint. Also if possible take readings with a paint depth gauge. BUT as I say, this is all a bit advanced... but it IS how you will get stunning black paintwork.
Without the painter getting the finish right in the first place you wouldn't have anything to polishI see a bunfight comming....:mil90:
So I'll start it....I cant see the link between being a hairy arsed painter and the fineties of polishing a car. Especially when the car looks that good!!
I swear by Mer polish - the cumulative effect means it gets a little bit better each time, rather than waxing where you have to get the surface absolutely prepared before applying the first coat of wax.
Without the painter getting the finish right in the first place you wouldn't have anything to polish.Past experience tells me that buffer+novice+swage line=woops
A skilled painter serves an apprenticeship and learns many differnent techniques like blending, roll off, wet on wet and fade. He also learns how to alter the finish of the clear from super flat to peal. I can't recall seing a an apprenticeship for detailing. I do appreciate the work that goes into perfecting paint but a lot of smoke and mirrors is talked which stems from the states. The difference is that when a painter works in a volume controlled crash repair bodyshop then all that is required is that the finish is as good as when new. If a customer want's perfect then that just involves more labour time to attain it. The quick way to deep shine which will last a rasonable time is wash with neutral water and soft soap. Rinse with neutral water. Chamois it until dry then use a colour magic wax mixed with a PDI wax. PDI is pre delivery inspection and it is what is applied to new carsHmmm, not strictly true. Being a detailer (one who can also spray paint) I would say that spraying is a skill but one which is a lot easier to learn than paint polishing.
I've colour sanded a few motor in the past, mainly to correct paint defects such as scratches but I've also colour sanded new paint on a show Vee Dub. The guy who painted that needs to go to specsavers (runs and all sorts) but most of it didn't matter really, it was the polishing work which made the car what it was. It got 2nd place BTW, ****y really, should have been 1st LOL.
As for wax, if you're not going to do any kind of preparation work like claybar or machine polishing, buy the cheapest wax you clap eyes on. It's pointless putting decent wax on unprepared paint. Grab a tin of turtle wax from Hellfrauds.
A skilled painter serves an apprenticeship and learns many different techniques like blending, roll off, wet on wet and fade. He also learns how to alter the finish of the clear from super flat to peal. I can't recall seeing a an apprenticeship for detailing.
How many variants on average do you think a colour has? Even a photspectrometer will not guarantee colour match. Different manufacturers of paint will attain the same visible colour using different pigments so unless you have the exact pot that the car was painted in you haven't much chance of getting it to exact match. How do you solve the problem of colour fade from an aged panel because the code only gives you it's original colour when leaving the factory. It might have been painted numerous times and I have come across many jobs were the front doesn't match the back. You wouldn't detect it with the human eye though.The only painters I've come across who served an apprenticeship are all retired now, sad though it is, the modern (anything post 1979) apprenticeship consists of learning on the job and some day release to the local college, sorry, University. No tech colleges left either, all trendy uni's nowadays.
Given the amount of bodyshops who can't paint one door on a Disco because of colour match issues only serves to prove the above. They always insist on painting the whole side so they can hide their shoddy colour matching on a bonnet shut line. It would be so nice to find a bodyshop with some proper time-served painters, they are in a very tiny minority nowadays.
Totally agree about diamondbrite, supaguard etc. Snake oil. Not tried the PDI wax trick though. Where would one acquire something like that from?
isnt polishing and painting just as much of a skill as anything else i thought it was
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