San Diego on the coast. Until the last couple of months it is usually pretty sunny and nice here, thanks to global warming, errrrr, wait, that isn’t a thing anymore, climate change. Sorry guys, I am joking. No acid rain or extreme conditions.
Both trucks are outside 24/7. Land Rover is a 2005. Chevy is a 1998.
I would do a compound, polish and wax every couple of months. More so on the Land Rover. The Chevy had clear coat failure on the hood and top, to a lesser degree on the bed rails.
The Land Rover had clear coat failure on the hood, the roof snd the rear spoiler, not too much of a painted roof on this vehicle, most of the roof is glass.
Vehicles were hand-washed weekly.
We had the top and roof repainted on the Land Rover. Came out 98%. Painter struggled with getting the paint match spot on. Something I don’t understand.
I just can’t justify getting the truck repainted. It is 20 years old, has 150k miles on it. I use it haul surfboards and sandy kids to and from the beach, Home Depot runs and the occasional dump run.
Still drives well, frankly I hate that it looks so bad.
I started using the optimum products, they did and still do work well. I started with an old porter cable 7424. Upgraded to an almost new 7424xp that found on Craigslist for $50. the guy that I bought it from gave me all of his detailing products and pads, and some autogeek literature, bad mistake on my part, the slippery slope began.
I added a Rupes 21 and a dozen Rupes pads and liters of every Rupes products. I added the Rupes Uhs pads and product when those were introduced.
Then I Added a flex 3401 to the arsenal. Frankly, the flex 3401 is my favorite polisher. Strong, consistent and it doesn’t bog down on curves and non-flat panels, sorry Rupes.
Currently, I pull out the flex 90% of the time and the Rupes and split the other 10% between the porter cable and the Rupes. The pc mainly on tighter spots with a 4inch backing plate and the Rupes because I really want to like it more, it is just a pain in the butt to use when it bogs down so much. I have heard all of the suggestions on technique. I don’t buy it. The machine design has major flaws. It just doesn’t work well on anything but large truck and suv hoods, roofs and trunk lids. Sides and curves are just a fight.
We have a 1996 porsche 993, the Rupes won’t even keep rotating on the rear fenders. Really, I want to like it. I have two liters of Uhs, six Uhs pads. Two liters of Rupes blue, two liters of white, two liters of green and two liters of yellow. Plus some Rupes micro fiber pads, which frankly I have never really used. I have found that the Rupes blue pads or lake country orange pads work just as well and they don’t require gallons of product
I could almost open an autogeek west coast distribution center with all of the detailing stuff that I have accumulated. I am pretty sure that there is a new category in the psychiatric journals for “auto geek ocd. “
Dang 25% sales and free shipping sucker me in every Time!
Well I am done with my early morning rant and complete detour of this thread. So much for waking up at 4am.
I am interested to see how the new clear coat restorer works out. I think that it is an optimum product. I watched a video on it. Looked amazing. I haven’t seen it listed for sale on autogeek yet. I am noticing some tail tail signs of clear coat failure on the rear spoiler on one of our Range Rover sports I have a buddy with an older BMW X5 in dark blue. His top and rear spoiler are getting chalky looking b. Seems like the perfect product for that application. An area that you don’t really see, but needs to be corrected.
Love this forum! Phil