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Good info David.PPG also makes/has made a few other similar clears for BMW 5, 6 & 7 Series (Powered Clear) and Ferrari (I can’t recall the name), Infinity (Self Healing), Nissan (Scratch Guard).
Good info David.
Do you know if the BMW M3s have it? Particularly the 2008 convertible? I am looking at one currently. Dont want to deal with owning one if it has that paint.
I think Mike's warning is aimed more towards a detailer taking a cautious approach with a customer's ceramicleared car where the paint polishing history unknown.
-Rick
Mike Phillips said:The customer bought the car brand new but brand new from the dealership it came with holograms, buffer marks and compound residue everywhere.
My hope is that someday, someone from the car manufacturing world will read our forum and somehow, new cars and trucks will start getting more paint sprayed onto them, not less and sprayed with a paint system that's easier to work on. But I'm not holding my breath.
:xyxthumbs:
What about writing some car manufacturers and pointing this out? It seems like they'd want their cars to look better than others and to be represented well at car shows and the like rather than be swirled-up, messes. Then again, I guess it's all about volume with them. Still, just wondering if you ever wrote or spoke to anybody about it.
Right. I get the point of the warning, but, it applies to the owners of these cars that do their own correction work.I think Mike's warning is aimed more towards a detailer taking a cautious approach with a customer's ceramicleared car where the paint polishing history unknown. For your own car that you buy new, why avoid this kind of paint? You'll take care of the car right? If you need to remove some minor swirls you're not going to be removing any more paint than you would with normal clear, thus you will be removing hardly any paint. Personally I'd much rather have ceramiclear on my G37 than the self healing stuff I'm stuck with that scratches if I look at it.
-Rick
just my small info knowledge....
ceramic abrassives wear away at defect rather than cutting at them. They roll around on the surface like little balls of metal and reduce the deffects but rounding them over in a more gentle way. Simipliar to rounding over a scratch with a polisher when the paint levels will not let your remove full. By rounding over you defuse the light and with no sharp edges it scatter the direct light and is difused. This is how ceramic polish work
we use this tech inside Fixer btw!
I think he is talking about the abrasives his company uses in its polishes that we should use in ceramic paint. In my opinion totally relevant to the conversation.That's nice - except the discussion isn't about ceramic abrasives, but Ceramiclear paint...
A brand new Mercedes-Benz AMG from a Mercedes-Benz Dealership should have a brand new, pristine finish. Period.
Great info David! Nice to hear from you.![]()
Good info David.
Do you know if the BMW M3s have it? Particularly the 2008 convertible? I am looking at one currently. Dont want to deal with owning one if it has that paint.
Yes, in theory, but not in practice. Case in point, I did a Pre Delivery Inspection (PDI) for a client recently at a MB dealer in S. Florida. Through my instruction, he vehamently requested when special ordering his new vehicle that they not lay a single hand on it when it arrived at their store. I was to do any and all physical prep of the vehicle per their agreement. He actually tracked the vehicle through final delivery right up to the time of day it was to arrive there. As soon as it did, I was dispatched there to inspect it. I can assure you that no one ever washed or buffed this vehicle at the dealer. This video was filmed by me at the dealer. I am 100% confident that this damage was done at the factory:
Click for video:
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I think he is talking about the abrasives his company uses in its polishes that we should use in ceramic paint. In my opinion totally relevant to the conversation.
VERY, VERY good information, David! :dblthumb2:Mike – This is a great article! I’ve not only corrected many vehicles equipped with finickey clears, but ones with the notorious (and misrepresented) CeramiClear finish. This finish is actually a joint effort of PPG and Mercedes of Germany. PPG also makes/has made a few other similar clears for BMW 5, 6 & 7 Series (Powered Clear) and Ferrari (I can’t recall the name), Infinity (Self Healing), Nissan (Scratch Guard).
Mercedes is the only manufacturer using CeramiClear on most of their overseas manufactured vehicles. Mercedes produced in the US, such as their ML , GL and GLK trucks, do not have CeramiClear as well as any vehicle with a Carbon Fiber substrate like the Black Series and SLR which is actually painted in England (McClaren). As a matter of fact, I’ve been told my one of the PPG factory reps that the clear on the SLR (which is extremely soft) can actually be reflowed with a dedicated heat lamp making it more rigid.
The nano-particles in the CeramiClear system is not only in place on the top surface portion of the clearcoat, but throughout the entire clearcoat surface, but for the most part the “hard” attributes are highly concentrated in the upper .2-.3 mils of the surface. So, this special feature can be removed with heavy buffing and/or sanding. Because this surface is so hard in nature, it would take multiple hard buffing sessions to conquer this.
Mercedes started using CeramiClear finishes around 2003 and can be identified by inspection of their Vin tag located on the driver’s door jam. Look to the paint code and it should have a “C” indicating that it is indeed CeramiClear.
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Despite what Eric mentioned, CeramiClear can and is being applied in the refinish industry. I actually know of 2 shops in the S. Florida area that are spraying CeramiClear and charging a premium for it too. Hope this helps!