I have another Black Range Rover full paint correction coming up this coming Tuesday. I went to correct this vehicle 3 weeks ago site unseen and when I arrived it was blasted with rock chips. It is a 2012 with 30k and I've never seen one in such bad shape.
I spoke with the customer and he decided to take it to the body shop. He will pick it up tomorrow (Friday) he is bound and determined to have me come correct the vehicle from the front doors back and the roof this Tuesday.
(The body shop resprayed the entire front clip. Hood, front fenders, front bumper)
my question is
can I opti coat the fresh paint if the customer chooses to coat it and if not can I apply my WGTS to it after I complete my correction.
Opti-Coat II is like adding a layer of clear paint to a car. This means your are for the most part, sealing the paint to a very high degree and if there are any solvents or other substances that have NOT finished outgassing you will have effectively trapped them "in" the paint.
In a perfect world, your customer would be open to a little education and allow some time to go by, like a week or two, just for safe measures, and then let you seal it.
I do understand I may have some work to do to the front clip if the body shop fails to deliver 100% perfection, but I want to know where I stand on protecting it.
The Wolfgang Total Swirl Remover as well as the Uber Compound and Finishing Glaze are all "Body Shop Safe" that means they can be used,
A: In a fresh paint environment, (body shop), without contaminating it.
B: Applied and worked over brand spanking new fresh paint without sealing it.
However, the TSR won't act like a wax or sealant to either protect it or make it look the way a wax would make it look.
The Finishing Glaze would, either hand applied or machine applied with something like a Porter Cable and a soft foam buffing pad and the a VERY gentle wipe off.
All three of these products are
water soluble so as soon as your customer starts to drive the car in
inclement weather or
washes it the
appearance quality will start to diminish as compared to how it would
look and how
long the "look" would last if it were coated with something that is not water soluble.
This is the dilemma anyone faces after getting new paint.
What to do for the first 3-4 weeks.
If it were my car I'd wait at least a few weeks and then seal it. If this guy can't wait the seal it for him but maybe consider having him sign a release of some sort so if the paint does bubble up, (your fault or not), you don't get the blame.
I doubt the paint would bubble up, like I said in my first post to this thread I've NEVER seen a new paint job fail because it was sealed too soon.
Don't know if any of the above helps...
Seal everything but the hood and educate him as to why. Heck bring this thread up on your computer, e-mail him the link or copy and paste my reply into MS Word and print it out and give it to him.
You've done the right thing by doing some research. You are already in the act of helping him. by looking out for his best interests.
:dunno: