Buff Off Contest @ Detail Fest 2011???

Best paint is best paint. Fillers and glazes should be allowed.
 
I said next year because I can't make it to Detailfest this year! A stand alone event would be a cool thing. Mike/Max, my suggestion: Get through this year's Detailfest, talk to Mother's, Meguiar's, the other sponsors, even get a major car rental place on board. Sometime after Easter start brainstorming, get the word out; Dude- I think this could be huge.
 
Best paint is best paint. Fillers and glazes should be allowed.

So are you suggesting judging on best appearing paint or fastest detail? Because with fillers and glazes I think most people could finish off in one step as long as we're not talking about a finish with tons of RIDS to remove.
 
If you are allowed 24hrs to do your thing, speed isn't a factor. Especially with teams. Glazes aren't going to hide RIDs, just bump up the gloss/wetness a bit on certain applications. After total correction of course. Paint should be perfected to the highest level IMHO. How you get there shouldn't matter as long as you use the best of your abilites.
 
How you get there shouldn't matter as long as you use the best of your abilites.


:iagree:

Someone with no experience at all can throw a glaze on a car and make it look decent. But an experienced professional who knows how to sand, compound, polish, glaze, and seal properly will put a rookie to shame any day of the week. If the buff-off is meant to showcase the best of the best; any method should be open for use.

My question...if we are looking for the best paint; what would be considered the best? Is perfectly level paint with no orange peel preferred over a perfectly scratch and swirl free paint job with the "original" orange peel still intact? I only ask because "original paint" is valued highly in the show car world; and many original paint jobs have orange peel.
 
If you are allowed 24hrs to do your thing, speed isn't a factor. Especially with teams. Glazes aren't going to hide RIDs, just bump up the gloss/wetness a bit on certain applications. After total correction of course. Paint should be perfected to the highest level IMHO. How you get there shouldn't matter as long as you use the best of your abilites.

I agree... I just think there ought to be at least some level of control to keep people from "cheating" (though I know true professional results can't really be cheated) -- so I agree with the idea of an IPA wipe-down. The real skill is in defect removal, not in defect hiding/masking.
 
Truth be told, I wouldn't mind being in on this, even though I'm no professional by any means. It would just be cool to do and say, "I helped do that." Plus, getting to hang out with some pretty cool guys and gals wouldn't be bad either. Great chance to learn. :dblthumb2:
 
My question...if we are looking for the best paint; what would be considered the best? Is perfectly level paint with no orange peel preferred over a perfectly scratch and swirl free paint job with the "original" orange peel still intact? I only ask because "original paint" is valued highly in the show car world; and many original paint jobs have orange peel.

This isn't a Survivor class, so I say make the paint as nice as possible. You most likely won't be able to make Factory paint perfectly level anyways. I personally would go for sanding, but not for total flatness, just to create some nice sharpness and level away all the defects.


I agree... I just think there ought to be at least some level of control to keep people from "cheating" (though I know true professional results can't really be cheated) -- so I agree with the idea of an IPA wipe-down. The real skill is in defect removal, not in defect hiding/masking.

I agree, but If you think about it, who cares if you do a IA wipedown? If you're hinding defects and making paint look great for show purposes more power to you. I'd hate to get the car with super soft paint that marrs when you wipe it down after all that work just to prove you didn't fill.
 
I agree, but If you think about it, who cares if you do a IA wipedown? If you're hinding defects and making paint look great for show purposes more power to you. I'd hate to get the car with super soft paint that marrs when you wipe it down after all that work just to prove you didn't fill.

Good points. :surrender:
 
About 10 years ago I had this idea where approximately 12 identical black Corvettes were brought together and then equally scratched up using a bucket of sand and gravel mixed with a car wash solution, of something like that...

Then a group of Detailers would be give 24 hours to do their best to take the paint to it's maximum potential.

Afterwards, a group of judges would inspect the paint on each car in different light settings and do their best to pick the top 3 winners.

The above would likely be very difficult to pull off and getting the that many identical cars together that could be thrashed and then restored would also be an expensive challenge.

It takes quite a bit of time to do an entire car, let along a modern Corvette, and because I don't think show car detailing should be rushed, thus the 24 hour time frame.

An easier version would be black paint panels like Kevin Brown created using upside down cookie sheets when we held the NXT ti Classes a few years ago. The cookie sheets are small enough you can knock one out with as many steps as a person wanted to use rather quickly.

Here's some pictures of the upside down cookie sheets as posted by Joe Fernandez aka Superior Shine who will be here at DetailFest

TWO THUMBS UP !!--Meguiar’s NXT Tech Institute




Car Hoods are too large...

Just typing outloud...


:)


WOW that has about 7 years now! Time flys when your having fun!!!
 
Hi Guys! I think that many will be able to restore the paint with wet sanding, buffing then polishing but the question is how long will the shine last! It boils down to product knowledge because its the products that will ultimately be the deciding factor. How do you guys feel about that?
 
I am going to make my own cookies sheet thing. Can anyone pm me the steps or process used to make them.

Tim
 
Hi Guys! I think that many will be able to restore the paint with wet sanding, buffing then polishing but the question is how long will the shine last! It boils down to product knowledge because its the products that will ultimately be the deciding factor. How do you guys feel about that?

Im not totally understanding where you are going with this. :confused:
 
Hi Guys! I think that many will be able to restore the paint with wet sanding, buffing then polishing but the question is how long will the shine last! It boils down to product knowledge because its the products that will ultimately be the deciding factor. How do you guys feel about that?

For show purposes, products and their longevity shouldn't be a consideration as long as they make the end show result as good or better than the next product.
 
I agree, but If you think about it, who cares if you do a IA wipedown? If you're hinding defects and making paint look great for show purposes more power to you. I'd hate to get the car with super soft paint that marrs when you wipe it down after all that work just to prove you didn't fill.

I agree, a person does need to be careful when wiping paint during inspections.

I did an IPA wipe down of the single stage black paint on this 1972 Challenger after compounding to inspect the finish and the paint is soft enough that a person could scratch it if they wiped too hard and IPA can soften the upper surface of the paint making it easier to be scratched, especially a soft single stage paint as they are more porous and will absorber better than a modern clear coat finish.

1972 Challenger - Foam Pads - Meguiar's Microfiber Compound & Polish/Wax - Single Stage Black Paint


1972Challenger016.jpg




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:)
 
Yeah Mike, I hate it when that happens. All that hard work taking the finish to the Nth degree and you end up creating faint marring with the wash/wipe down step. Talk about frustration.

That's why I end up just doing a Dawn wash with a brand new MF after polishing(unless I'm using Opti-Coat where you need to use an IA too). The good thing about Dawn is that it leaves water on the finish in such a way that all you need is a leaf blower to totally dry it w/o any spotting. No toweling marks that way either.
 
It'd be really something if this kind of challenge did happen!!

I'd love to see! :D
 
Mike,

I would love to test my skills up against a seasoned vetern like yourself? Are you down for it? How about a personal challenge.

Barry
 
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