CAR DEALER TIPS AND TRICKs

muscleman

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Looking for any car dealer tricks to sprucing up a piece of junk

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I Dont understand. What are you specifically looking to do to what?

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Put saw dust in the tranny and it will shift smooth as silk for a couple of days ;)
 
i think hes saying is he has a piece of crap car, what can he do to get it to sale
 
i think hes saying is he has a piece of crap car, what can he do to get it to sale

This guys kinda getting it I'm looking for cheap production detailing tricks to make a car look good not the perfect way

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Putting lipstick on a pig can make.a car bring 100-300 more dollars

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This guys kinda getting it I'm looking for cheap production detailing tricks to make a car look good not the perfect way

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Here is my recommendation...

Wash: just buy duragloss by gallon

Tires/Wheels/Interior/: All Purpose Cleaner (Meguiars) at different dilutions

Trim: some type of trim restorer, pretty dramatic results some times

Steel wool and some metal polish..

Buy a bunch of towels (25 pack for 25$ red 300gsm towels on Amazon)

I'd buy at least one Wheel Brush like the Daytona pro... Yellow microfiber mitt from autogeek is good value.

Are you getting into polishing and correcting paint? If so, and you're still wanting to do it the cheap way--then I could go on. However, if you are like many of us on here, you will learn the right way and never go back to your old ways again...

Now if you are just trying to flip cars, that's another story and I can see why you would not want/need the "correct" way of doing things.

At the end of the day, as long as you're honest with your customer (not saying you're a pro and then do cheap tricks) then you should be just fine. If you're selling the service of "detailing" and wanting to do cheap work, you should be charging much cheaper rates.

If you are just flipping cars, a simple spray wax on the exterior, cleaning of the wheels, and a big focus on the interior... The tools I listed above were for this process and that's what I assumed you were doing when you asked this question.

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I work at a dealer and on a bad one it can take them 3-4 hours. The exterior you can just use a glaze, but the interior is where people care and there's no quick way to vacuum and remove stains.
 
Looking for any car dealer tricks to sprucing up a piece of junk

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When I use to flip cars I would stay away from junk! If the car had decent paint/interior maybe a couple small mechanical issues I would buyt it. i would wash then clay while car was still wet. After the car was dry I would hit with Megs M66(Quick Detailer Polish. Cuts pretty fast and leaves a nice shine.
 
I work at a dealer and on a bad one it can take them 3-4 hours. The exterior you can just use a glaze, but the interior is where people care and there's no quick way to vacuum and remove stains.

That reminds me of this video:

[video=youtube_share;oMVSXi2JgpY"]Guy pressure cleaning his Mercedes interior ?? - YouTube[/video]
 
I used to have an 86 Volvo 240 in Maroon with straight paint no clear that was really faded bad. When I went to sell it I got the blue tire shine and soaked the paint down with it and then buffed it in and put a coat of cheap wax on top. It looked better than when I bought it. A lot of people couldn't figure out why I wanted to sell it a that point.
 
I have seen a dealer send their cars to an outside detailer, in which turn they open all the doors, boot and hood and pressure spray all inside the door jams, inside the boot lid and hood. It is only water and then just wipe off but nothing like the merc video. Then continue with cleaning the exterior and interior (you can make the interior look good with very little effort).

Watch the merc video, it is bit extreme but it is only water and very little of it, probably does more good then harm.
 
Last edited:
Here is my recommendation...

Wash: just buy duragloss by gallon

Tires/Wheels/Interior/: All Purpose Cleaner (Meguiars) at different dilutions

Trim: some type of trim restorer, pretty dramatic results some times

Steel wool and some metal polish..

Buy a bunch of towels (25 pack for 25$ red 300gsm towels on Amazon)

I'd buy at least one Wheel Brush like the Daytona pro... Yellow microfiber mitt from autogeek is good value.

Are you getting into polishing and correcting paint? If so, and you're still wanting to do it the cheap way--then I could go on. However, if you are like many of us on here, you will learn the right way and never go back to your old ways again...

Now if you are just trying to flip cars, that's another story and I can see why you would not want/need the "correct" way of doing things.

At the end of the day, as long as you're honest with your customer (not saying you're a pro and then do cheap tricks) then you should be just fine. If you're selling the service of "detailing" and wanting to do cheap work, you should be charging much cheaper rates.

If you are just flipping cars, a simple spray wax on the exterior, cleaning of the wheels, and a big focus on the interior... The tools I listed above were for this process and that's what I assumed you were doing when you asked this question.

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Thanks

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If you really want to be like a dealer, wash it and put on some glaze to hide everything with a rotary and call it done.
 
"Color wax" can help get the vehicle: out the door;
down the road; and on its merry ol' way.

But don't be surprised to hear your first few (and only)
Customers pitch a fit and say:
"Hey! What the heck's going on here pal?
Your paint jobs just came off in the wash bucket"!!


'If defects, are what you are trying to hide:
Someone will come back, to tan your hide'!!



Bob
 
I agree with Bob on this.. No need to be deceitful to get the car sold...

Honest work will pay off in the long run. Like I said before, keep it simple on the outside and do your real work on the inside... That will yield results worth paying for
 
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