AJ Skrove
New member
- May 17, 2017
- 5
- 0
Hey Mike. 
I have read some of your articles on #7, and i have gotten a hold of a big jug of it.
I have a 1970 TX9 Black Velvet Dodge Dart with original paint. (On most panels anyway.)
And it is basically drier than standup night at the retirement home. (Hard to describe, but it almost looks like panel-long swirls in many directions.)
You have written that these paints are very soft etc, especially black because of the charcoal pigment. (Or at least this is my understanding.)
The problem is that my paint seems suuuper hard.
Before learning about #7, i went at it with a rotary and Scholl S3 Gold(Pretty rough stuff).
This only gave me a hint of more shine, but nowhere near what was excpected. (Only did this on a part of the trunk lid.)
In pure desperation, i even went at a section of the roof panel with 1500grit wetpaper on a DA sander. This resulted in a bit more shine, but mostly the car was looking at me like: "Is that all you got kiddo?"
I have tried #7 on some panels, though not overnight yet. (No garage to put it in.) I see lots of contaminants coming off, but not really any shine improvement. I did clay the panels before applying #7.
Should i just follow the tutorial and soak soak soak, or is there anything i can do to ease the soaking process?
I will try to get the car inside somewhere for overnight soaking.
And is there any reason old Mopar paint would be this hard?
There is a spring break event in my town (Ok, it's 2 grocery stores and a gas station) next week, and i would really like to get at least some shine.
Any ideas/help will be wildly appreciated, and i am a trained photographer so high quality before/after photos can be supplied if so desired.
These are the only pictures i have of the car right now, although not very explaining it at least gives you an idea. (Does not show how bad it is in any way, these were not taken for this purpose.)
View attachment 57358
View attachment 57357
Thank you in advance.

I have read some of your articles on #7, and i have gotten a hold of a big jug of it.
I have a 1970 TX9 Black Velvet Dodge Dart with original paint. (On most panels anyway.)
And it is basically drier than standup night at the retirement home. (Hard to describe, but it almost looks like panel-long swirls in many directions.)
You have written that these paints are very soft etc, especially black because of the charcoal pigment. (Or at least this is my understanding.)
The problem is that my paint seems suuuper hard.
Before learning about #7, i went at it with a rotary and Scholl S3 Gold(Pretty rough stuff).
This only gave me a hint of more shine, but nowhere near what was excpected. (Only did this on a part of the trunk lid.)
In pure desperation, i even went at a section of the roof panel with 1500grit wetpaper on a DA sander. This resulted in a bit more shine, but mostly the car was looking at me like: "Is that all you got kiddo?"
I have tried #7 on some panels, though not overnight yet. (No garage to put it in.) I see lots of contaminants coming off, but not really any shine improvement. I did clay the panels before applying #7.
Should i just follow the tutorial and soak soak soak, or is there anything i can do to ease the soaking process?
I will try to get the car inside somewhere for overnight soaking.
And is there any reason old Mopar paint would be this hard?
There is a spring break event in my town (Ok, it's 2 grocery stores and a gas station) next week, and i would really like to get at least some shine.
Any ideas/help will be wildly appreciated, and i am a trained photographer so high quality before/after photos can be supplied if so desired.

These are the only pictures i have of the car right now, although not very explaining it at least gives you an idea. (Does not show how bad it is in any way, these were not taken for this purpose.)
View attachment 57358
View attachment 57357
Thank you in advance.