where would you advise that i start? machine buffing is out of the question, the paint is too fragile and is starting to flake off in a few areas
Machine buffing is very safe with the right machine... watch this video where I'm working on oxidized single stage paint but mostly watch what I do to my hand to show how safe a DA Polisher like a Porter Cable is...
Removing Swirls and Oxidation By Machine
[video=youtube_share;PWdYCHZrpd8"]How To Remove Oxidation by Machine Polishing with...[/video]
Products Featured
Pinnacle Ultra Poly Clay Kit to clay paint
Pinnacle Advanced Swirl Remover to chop out dead, oxidized paint
Pinnacle Advanced Finishing Polish to maximize gloss, clarity and richness of color
Pinnacle Souveran Paste Wax - This is a "Finishing Wax" or a true "Show Car Wax"
You could also use the liquid version, I demonstrated the paste version to show how to apply a paste by machine.
Pinnacle Liquid Souveran Car Wax
I used
Microfiber Gloves to hold the wax in my hand as I spread a little over the face of the foam pad.
Lake Country 5.5" Flat Orange Light Cutting Pad - To remove the oxidation
Lake Country 5.5" Flat White Polishing Pad - To Maximize Gloss, Clarity and Richness of Color
Lake Country 5.5" Blue Finishing Pad - To Machine-Apply the Pinnacle Finishing Wax for True Show Car Results
Microfiber Wax
Porter Cable 7424XP - For all machine work.
Speed Settings
6.0 for removing oxidation and swirls with firm downward pressure and move the polisher slowly over the paint.
5.0 for polishing the paint to a high gloss with firm downward pressure for the first 3-4 Section Passes and then lessen your pressure and you can move the polisher a tick faster at the end.
4.0 for applying the wax or paint sealant. At this point of the process you don't need high speed because all you're trying to do is spread out and work in a layer of wax or sealant.
Machine Applying a Wax or Paint Sealant
AFTER you have removed all the oxidation or any other paint defects and then after you have polished the paint to a high gloss you can apply your wax or a paint sealant by machine but instead of doing small sections at a time you can apply to pretty much as much paint as you can reach and cover with your polisher as long as you have enough wax or paint sealant to continue moving around a panel or the car. That is you don't apply finishing waxes or sealants to small sections.
The reason you remove swirls to small sections is because you need to focus the cleaning or abrading action of the polishes to "small" sections or you won't remove the oxidation and other defects.
Make sense?
Seriously...
Get the Porter Cable or a version of it, (Megs or Griots), and some 5.5" Lake Country Flat foam poishing pads like you see me use in the above video and some Pinnacle polishes and you will be AMAZED out how nice that old paint will
clear up and
gloss up.
probably the best ive ever had it looking, but it only looks like that for a day or two before the wax begins to dull
That's because you need to "clean" the paint. Paint gets dirty as dirt embedds INTO the paint plus it's oxidized. You need to clean it and by the word clean I mean gently abrade it with a Medium Cut Polish like the Pinnacle Advanced Swirl Remover. This polish works great and it's very safe. I'll be using this same approach on an all original Cadillac for an upcoming project very soon...
The Caddy King's Hidden Collection of 1959 Cadillacs!
Now we're talking about some old and ORIGINAL paint...
and i have never been able to figure out whats up with the yellow stripes. theyre paint, but ive never been able to get them to shine, and its like they absorb water/liquids when wash them, or spill something on them.
The paint used for the stripes is dried out. It could be it was matte to start with but either way, if you run a white polishing pad over the stripes and the green paint with a polish like the Pinnacle ASR it's either going to improve it or nothing will but it certainly wont harm it and it's the least you can do and try.
Keep us updated, if I lived closer I would jump at the chance to help your take this Corvette's paint to its maximum potential!
"Taking your car's paint to it's maximum potential"
