vanev
New member
- Sep 27, 2015
- 438
- 0
Hey everyone.. I had a few questions hopefully you all can help me with.
Last year I dived into Mobile detailing and love detailing for both my personal car and as a side business. I did strictly mobile detailing since I lived in an apartment at the time and had no where to work from home. This year I just bought a house and now have a garage that I can detail in. With that being said, I'm a bit lost on a few aspects.
Interior details: How do you guys dry interiors? When doing mobile jobs I simply left with the car still wet or damp and told them to roll down the windows and let it sit in the sun for a bit and that'll do the trick. Now they have to leave the car with me/pick it up so I can't really have them drive home in a wet car. Whats a quick way to dry out their interior? Typically how long does this take? Do you guys usually put any paper mats to cover their just washed carpets? I've googled them but don't know what they are called and couldn't find any. If you guys could give me some tricks / best practices that'll be great.
Exterior details: I usually spend anywhere from a few hours to the entire day doing a car at someones house. Theres always a hiccup so my time estimate is usually off by an hour or a lot more. When detailing from home, do you just give people a rough estimate and call them once it is ready? If its a job that'll take me most of the day, is it common for people to drop off their cars and pick up the next day? Personally I think that'll be the best scenario so I don't have to rush through the job to meet the time I said I'd be done.
Lastly, Does anyone get more garage details than mobile? I'd like to head in that direction as mobile can get a bit tiring constantly packing and unpacking. However, I'd assume most of the business is on the mobile side.
Thank you in advance to anyone who can help!
-Eric
Interiors:
A steam cleaner in tandem with some type of extraction is a win.
My $100 McCulloch Steam Cleaner in tandem with my $50 dollar Little Green Machine can not only compete with the best extractors on the market costing thousands, it beats them in actual cleaning.
Also makes for a much faster drying time.
A simple Shop Vac with a Gulper Nozzle will dry carpet and upholstery lightning fast.
Also consider battery powered fans placed inside the vehicle.
Time Frame:
My experience as a full time detailer since last December, and part time detailer of more than 20 years before that, is that the time frames stated by most professional detailers in social media are completely unrealistic.
This is more specific to first time details on a vehicle, vs a maintenance detail where you are cleaning a vehicle that is already clean and now maintained.
The better tools, products and machines will always improve time frames.
Having a helping hand or work crew will significantly decrease time frame.
The reality is, most vehicles are not properly taken care of, and are neglected most where it matters the most.
If you are finding that it takes you much longer to compete a detail compared to what you see posted online, you are not doing anything wrong.
You are simply experiencing the reality of detailing in the real world.
You will find faster ways of cutting to the chase, but doing it right is a time consuming process.
I now separate the terms Production Detailing and Professional Detailing, but that is just how I look at it.
Mobile/Shop:
I am strictly mobile at the moment.
I agree that the packing/load/set-up/take down/pack again/unload is highly annoying.
A van will solve a lot of my own issues with this, and I am searching for a good van or truck as we speak.
Ultimately, should I do this full time for long term, I will have a shop.
Mobile detailing is much better suited for strictly mainetance details vs full paint corrections in my opinion.
I much prefer a shop over mobile detailing.