You do realize that once you "touch" the paint:
the Shop, the painter, and the "cut&buff-er"...
Are all now completely off the hook!!
Any displeasure with the "finish work" is yours...and only yours...from then on.
Bob
WORD!!!!
Car was not baked. It was done in a cross draft spray booth. I think I might be better off waiting at least the 90 days and just let it cure. Thanks for all of you're input. Good to know that I'm not the only person out there who is a freak when it comes to their car looking perfect. Thanks to autogeek for giving us all a springboard to bounce ideas and advice to one another.
Dude, 7 months, cross draft, not baked, and still unhappy. Hmmmmm?
Photos would help, and the sweet part is you can upload to AG (as a forum member) an unlimited amount of photos.

Just resize them all to no larger than 800 x 600 (to make it a lot easier) and build yourself some of your own libraries. (Can even make the private.)
Still unsure what you don't like though. Is it orange peeled? Buffer burns? Buffer trails/holograms? Dry spray? Trash, runs, what????? (
Thinking it's not the last ones as you say the paint itself is good.)
Look at the Mazdaspeed thread I did a couple of weeks ago. That was a $12,000+ repair that took 7 weeks. When he got it back the first time it was covered in orange peel and even some dry spray. I went with him that time, back to the shop, and had them color sand the entire right side. Of course they filled it with glaze and once he drove it for about a month (was waiting on it to cure anyhow so we could coat it) the glaze melted/went away from all the rain we had and what you see in the thread was what it looked like.
It was BAAAAAAAD! Hood and bumper cover were swirled something crazy. They had been replaced with used crash parts (same color) but never properly buffed. The right side though was horrible as far as finish. Once it was done I emailed the photos to the body shop manager. Actually I know the guy, and it's a BIG chain of dealerships. I'll end up getting work out of it, FROM HIM because they are just not set up to do that type of correction work. Whereas I'll spend days on it getting it right, they will spend a couple of hours and that's all it'll ever get.
You need to have a serious, perhaps bullet pointed, line itemed talk with the shop manager, perhaps the painter and the cut/buff crew. Likely they have nothing but a rotary and some 3M glaze, and chances are... they have never
heard of names like Griot's, Rupes, and Flex. Even though two of those have been making tools for professionals for decades! Probably longer than the painter and his helper combined have been alive.
Surely they can do better work, but do they WANT to do better work? :dunno: Maybe they'll give you a warm place to work, you can take your own tools, and show them HOW to do it like you want it.

rops:
Until then, Welcome to AGO, and I guess we'll wait on those photos.
