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Awesome! You dat man now!
Beautiful, beautiful job!
Tom
Brought back from the grave!!
Now THAT is a save! Awesome work, Jake.![]()
Thank you very mich!!!!Nice work. Didnt look promising but came out great
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That is pure magic what you did!! Not only did you pull the rabbit out of the hat, you pulled the entire zoo out!!
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Thank you brother. I was quite amazed as was my wife, and customer.That is pure magic what you did!! Not only did you pull the rabbit out of the hat, you pulled the entire zoo out!!
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Thank you brother. I was quite amazed as was my wife, and customer.
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Thank you! The car is actually a metallic black. I am using this as an advertising piece so I should get more clients. We'll see how it goes.I just popped in the forum and started reading, let me say congrats that was an awesome transformation, I’m sure you were feeling real good to see the result , funny I thought based on first photo that the car was beige /gold / light gray, but Dark gray !!!???!!???? Great job I’m sure by now you have gained more clients and confidence that you can do this, thanks for sharing your experience
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Hard to say, maybe it was a ghostWhat happened to that car you we're working on?
I see a completely different car.
:dblthumb2:
The above was in my first how-to book, The Art of Detailing
Then when I updated it and came out with The Complete Guide to a Show Car Shine, I added another category. So now there are 12 Paint Condition Categories, not 11 categories.
The added category was
#10 Beginning Clearcoat Failure
And the reason why is becasue it is a condtioin of paint and it's very different than actual clearcoat failure.
Clear as mud?
![]()
Paint with extreme oxidation can be saved by carefully removing the dead, oxidized paint and rejuvenating with polishing oilsNow here's this. What if we rubbed a hood down like this the night before with the #7 show car glaze to soften up the dead paint, then came back the following day and compounded off the dead paint.
Do you think that the #7 Show Car Glaze would Soften up the dead paint and make it easier to remove via the compounding process for clear coat paint?
I can remember when I did this job that there was A LOT of dead paint building up on the face of the fiber pad I was using. Actually I wished that I had more pads to get the hood done because my pad was getting loaded up with a lot of material and product, but I just kept cleaning it on the fly.
Eventually my fiber pad got so loaded up that I had to finish the compounding process with a foam cutting pad.
Im thinking now that maybe I could have just used a rotary with a wool pad instead for the compounding process.
Mike, I'm working on a re write of my show and shine article on this ford focus. Now I've went down the rabbit hole and thought of something.
When your talking about extreme oxidation in single stage paints you mentioned rejuvenating the paint with polishing oils. Meguiars #7 Show Car Glaze comes to mind when I think of this...
Now here's this. What if we rubbed a hood down like this the night before with the #7 show car glaze to soften up the dead paint, then came back the following day and compounded off the dead paint.
Do you think that the #7 Show Car Glaze would Soften up the dead paint and make it easier to remove via the compounding process for clear coat paint?
I can remember when I did this job that there was A LOT of dead paint building up on the face of the fiber pad I was using. Actually I wished that I had more pads to get the hood done because my pad was getting loaded up with a lot of material and product, but I just kept cleaning it on the fly.
Eventually my fiber pad got so loaded up that I had to finish the compounding process with a foam cutting pad.
Im thinking now that maybe I could have just used a rotary with a wool pad instead for the compounding process.
Yea that's a great Idea! I remember reading about that! Thanks John! I appreciate you buddy!If I had that job, I think I'd do the Comet Cleanser method to remove the bulk of the dead paint before touching it with any pad besides an aggressive wool on a rotary. Even then I'd probably do the Comet thing first. I don't think there is any easier/quicker way to remove the dead paint and the end result would be exactly the same.
I never did the Comet thing on a clear-coat so I'm not sure how it would work, but that would be my starting point. Obviously - a small test spot first.