2018 Tesla Model 3

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Had a new client referral with his 2018 Tesla Model 3 in a beautiful red metallic paint. The plan was to get it corrected and protected.

Wash/decon- Hyperwash, Nanoskin fine towel

Wheels- Wheels off coating service. Cleaned with Mckees foaming wheel cleaner gel, Coated with IGL Eclipse. The wheel liners and suspension was also coated in IGL Eclipse

Paint- Like most Teslas the paint was less than stellar. Rupes Mark ll 21mm, Fast correction cream, Meguiars microfiber cutting pad

Finishing polish- Rupes Mark ll 21mm, Buff and shine yellow pad, Hyper polish

LSP- IGL Kenzo 4 year coating


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WALK AROUND VIDEO


YouTube
 
You Tube said that this vid does not exist.
 
Great work and write up and pictures as always Justin!

Before and after pictures is showing the depth difference very effectively.

Do you use an airbrush to apply the IGL Eclipse with? And around how much of Eclipse does it take to do a car like this with wheels and wheel wells and suspension and all?
 
You Tube said that this vid does not exist.

It's there. Try again.

Great work and write up and pictures as always Justin!

Before and after pictures is showing the depth difference very effectively.

Do you use an airbrush to apply the IGL Eclipse with? And around how much of Eclipse does it take to do a car like this with wheels and wheel wells and suspension and all?

Typically a hvlp gun. Just upgraded to a Iwata lph80. Things awesome. 50ML +/- maybe a bit more.
 
Awesome work.

Would love to know more about airbrushing coatings.

Again...good before and after pictures---great workmanship!

Tom
 
If you have clients with Teslas Model 3, inform them that they need to get mud flaps installed on the front wheels. There is a defect with that model. The wheels throw rocks and other debris along the sides of the vehicles and it removes the paint. Tesla refuses to cover it under warranty. Many people with vehicles less than a year old now have rust on the lower panels and the paint has been completelly removed down to metal. A simple mud flap will prevent this from happening and will cost only a few dollars for each wheel.

I sent an email about it to all my Tesla Model 3 clients.
 
Another winner, Justin.

I always love seeing what the pros do. :)
 
If you have clients with Teslas Model 3, inform them that they need to get mud flaps installed on the front wheels. There is a defect with that model. The wheels throw rocks and other debris along the sides of the vehicles and it removes the paint. Tesla refuses to cover it under warranty. Many people with vehicles less than a year old now have rust on the lower panels and the paint has been completelly removed down to metal. A simple mud flap will prevent this from happening and will cost only a few dollars for each wheel.

I sent an email about it to all my Tesla Model 3 clients.

I guess that's one way to deal with it but mudflaps are so ugly... Unless you drive an offroad vehicle that should not be used, it's terrible. But PPF which is the route I'd prefer, costs way more. Good thing I don't drive a Model 3 :)
 
It's there. Try again.

Typically a hvlp gun. Just upgraded to a Iwata lph80. Things awesome. 50ML +/- maybe a bit more.

Awesome work.

Would love to know more about airbrushing coatings.

Again...good before and after pictures---great workmanship!

Tom

^^ I'm with Tom on this. Intrigued by it but isn't it a bit overkill? Why not just apply wheel coating as normal? Honest question as I'm not familiar with the IGL Product lineup and how it's applied vs others. 50Ml+ just seems like an awful lot of coating to be used on that car.

Thanks!
 
^^ I'm with Tom on this. Intrigued by it but isn't it a bit overkill? Why not just apply wheel coating as normal? Honest question as I'm not familiar with the IGL Product lineup and how it's applied vs others. 50Ml+ just seems like an awful lot of coating to be used on that car.

Thanks!

I've heard other detailers say yes, it wastes more product. But you get done in like 10 to 20 % of the time it would take to apply with a cloth/towel. Very little leveling to do afterwards. When you charge something like $200 to coat a set of wheels, even if you use an entire bottle that cost maybe $40 you're making good profit because you got done so quick.

This is what I heard before and it made sense to me. Of course only applies to those that detail for money and want to get done faster to get more cars in.

Let's hear if this matches Justin's opinion.
 
I've heard other detailers say yes, it wastes more product. But you get done in like 10 to 20 % of the time it would take to apply with a cloth/towel. Very little leveling to do afterwards. When you charge something like $200 to coat a set of wheels, even if you use an entire bottle that cost maybe $40 you're making good profit because you got done so quick.

This is what I heard before and it made sense to me. Of course only applies to those that detail for money and want to get done faster to get more cars in.

Let's hear if this matches Justin's opinion.

That really depends how you coat them.

Because I am mobile, I coat the face of the wheels as part of all my coating packages. But I don't do the barrels.

I had one guy asked me to do only his wheels, they were off the car. So I agreed and told him the price would depend on how long it would take.

Well... Those were not new wheels. So cleaning them correctly, claying them, polishing them, degreasing them and coating them ended up taking 4 hours.

So when you say it is quick to do, it really depends ;)
 
I guess that's one way to deal with it but mudflaps are so ugly... Unless you drive an offroad vehicle that should not be used, it's terrible. But PPF which is the route I'd prefer, costs way more. Good thing I don't drive a Model 3 :)

Well, we are talking enough debris to basically sandblast the bottom of the car to bare metal. I know PPF is resilient, but I don't think it would survive a constant assault like that for very long.
 
So as for spraying. IGL Eclipse is a spray and walk away self leveling coating. Yes I use a bit more but I charge 400$ for a wheels off service and that 50ml includes spraying all 4 inner wheel liners/suspension so it's not much at all. I don't have to do multiple coats or worry about leveling. Prep, spray walk away. Plus spraying honey comb grills is the easiest way for complete coverage. It can be applied by hand when needed but can be a challenge if your not used to it.

I purchase Eclipse by the liter at 1100$. Price per ML is about. 90 cents. So in other words it's a money maker. And will outlast any wheel coating out there. Even IGL wheel coating as it has a 2 year rating in a industrial environment. Rated to 1000 degrees Fahrenheit.
 
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