Do swirls bother you if they're not on your car?

If swirls on other cars bothers you, then how about how their lawn looks , their house is kept , or their children raised ? One great thing about growing old ... You learn not to sweat the small stuff or be bothered by things you can't control.
 
If swirls on other cars bothers you, then how about how their lawn looks , their house is kept , or their children raised ? One great thing about growing old ... You learn not to sweat the small stuff or be bothered by things you can't control.

Very true. :xyxthumbs:

The way I look at it is they make my cars look even better. :dblthumb2:
 
Swirls do bother me when Im seen in it... Let me elaborate.. I have a suit that is tailored, pressed and clean; However, if I have a rented tux I prefer not to have mustard and ketchup stains while I'm wearing it.

So, Yes I do try to correct the paint if it looks pretty bad. If I'm not seen in it I could care less. And by the way I was just kidding about using a rental as a practice panel, but I'm sure I'm not the first one who has thought that. I can't believe this thread is already 3 pages deep lol!
 
Great Idea! ...and WELCOME to the AG Forum!

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Thanks, from autopia!
 
Does not bother me, hoping the car will end up in my shop for correction.
Personally I love swirls as they pay my bills.
GO SWIRLS!!!!
 
I am often stuck in traffic on my 30 mile commute to work, and hate to see expensive cars that look as if a spider had a year to complete his web. The car is very clean itself, but the swirls are terrible.
 
If swirls on other cars bothers you, then how about how their lawn looks , their house is kept , or their children raised ? One great thing about growing old ... You learn not to sweat the small stuff or be bothered by things you can't control.

That doesn't bother me at all. Just swirls and dirty cars LOL
 
Notice, yes. Bother me, no. I've got other things to worry about than what another person's car looks like.
 
we were actually detailing another car and then started to look at the swirls on the loaner. since we already had some primed pads, we thought we would help them out. :) It really wasn't experimenting either, just some tried and true techniques.

wouldn't really have pulled out the detailing gear just for this, but makes you wish all dealerships had an autogeeker on staff.
 
wouldn't really have pulled out the detailing gear just for this, but makes you wish all dealerships had an autogeeker on staff.

For sure. But a lot of it is time. Mike Phillips talked about that a bit, too. These dealers 'detail' cars, complete exterior in interior, in as little as half an hour. Put it through an automatic wash bay, quick hit with a rotary and some cheap compound, use some sort of dressing or wax on the paint and exterior (shinier/greasier the better) and wipe down the interior and slather it up with greasy dressing.
 
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