Totoland Mach
New member
- Mar 3, 2006
- 1,142
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- #21
JoeD said:Toto is this the Magic Dressing you where referring to? Thanks JoeD
Yessir! That's it. He buys it in gallon quantities. Thanks.
Toto
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JoeD said:Toto is this the Magic Dressing you where referring to? Thanks JoeD
Woob said:Great work! Again shop is pretty sweet. Did you end up using purely using the Fexstool (sp?) with Opt Compound? Odd, never seen the lower sections with so much plastic.
Totoland Mach said:![]()
Toto
Woob said:Awesome work, thoughts on Ultrafina SE? I've heard for some of those European cars you need a glazing pad or a glaze to do the final finishing just because they are finicky.
V-DUB said:Wow!!! Great Job I Never Thought Someone Can Do That To A Car That Was In That Bad Of A Shape.. Can You Let Me What You Used For The Whole Thing Start To Finish. I Have A 1985 Toyota That Kind Of Looks Like The B4 Pics I Would Like To Do That To Mine.. I See That You And Others Are Taping Trim What Is That For So You Dont Get Them Dull From The Products.
ltoman said:toto, wish i had your skills!
ltoman said:toto, wish i had your skills!
Totoland Mach said:Thanks so much Lauren. Just remember, 7 months ago, I had never used a rotary, never wet-sanded, thought cutting pads were a last ditch fix, didn't even know that plastic body panels could burn so easily, never used glaze (except for XMT Glaze with Carnuba)....
I've had a good teacher with the dealer. But we've had our differences and work them out. For instance, his prior detailer came from a body shop environment and could cut paint, wet sand, and would use the rotary with a cutting pad/compound until the sheet metal (hood, trunk, etc) "popped" from the heat. The dealer thought this was the way to compound paint and I disagreed.
Well, just a few weeks ago, the dealer went to his painter and the guy told him that excess heat is flat wrong on today's paint. Using different pad and product combo's are the correct way with today's paint. Super heating painted metal is walking a fine line between correction and disaster.
So, now the dealer likes the way I use products safely. It's always a learning process in this field.
If there is one major point I've learned: Try an area start-to-finish (trunk, fender, etc) before tackling the rest of the car. That way you have the process of what's needed.
Toto