Chip, I'm confused. In Mike's original post, it says we are doing this by hand.
Is that not the plan anymore?
Good question.
My article on how to restore
barn finds with the original single stage paint has a component to it that some people miss. I know because I get asked questions about they part they miss and I see misinformation posted by others about this procedure.
So to answer your question and to clarify...
From my original article I have taken a screenshot of the third paragraph. I've also updated the thread and made the important part of the first sentence bold and red.
This is the part people miss and other people confuse themselves with and others because their project is NOT
important to them.
Read the
red text...
The key word is
important.
If it's
important to you to do everything you can to preserver the original paint on a car you own or are working on, then
INSTEAD of starting out with a compound or polish and
ABRADING DRY BRITTLE PAINT that's also probably
VERY THIN - then instead... condition the paint to make it less brittle and more workable by rubbing it down and gorging it with the TS oils found in the #7 Show Car Glaze.
This product has been around since the time of the Model T. I know of no other product that is still around using the original formula. None.
This product has a number of uses and one of them is to feed dry antique paint and bring the pigments back to life again as well as rejuvenate the paint.
By Hand
The first step is done by hand. That is you take terry cloth, usually a 100% cotton terry cloth wash cloth like you would use in the shower, and you fold it 4-ways and apply a LIBERAL amount of the #7 onto just one side, (continue using only this one side), and then using your ELBOW GREASE you begin rubbing the paint down with the #7.
This does 2 things....
1. The terry cloth acts as a gentle form of abrasive and the oils in the #7 act as a lubricant and together with the rubbing action you gently peel off decades of dead, oxidize paint. This is the SAFE way to remove the dead paint. Anyone can do this with a caveman compound but that's not how you work safely on paint that is IMPORTANT to you.
2. As you're rubbing the paint down you're also pushing the oils INTO the porous single stage paint. This is something a compound or polish cannot do, at least not with the oils found in the #7 which are a very specific type of oil.
The results from 2-3 well rubbed applications of the #7 are you remove the dead paint, bring back the full richness of color and make the paint safer to compound or polish IF you think it needs compounding or polishing.
For some people, the results from simply rubbing the paint down with the #7 and terry cloth are more than good enough and afterwards they'll choose to slap a wax on the car then stick a fork in it and call it done.
By Machine
For others, they will want to try to squeeze a little more surface shine and gloss out of the paint plus remove some below surface defects, (swirls and scratches), and for these people they will then do some TEST SPOTS (like I've been teaching in the car detailing world for over 20 years now), and determine a process to carefully machine polish the old antique paint using the least aggressive products, pads and even tools to get the job done.
This is why Chip has the #7 as well as the same high quality compounds and polishes I used when I rubbed out Wayne Carini's 1953 Hudson.
I ONLY rubbed the front fenders and hood
by hand on Wayne's Hudson with the Pinnacle Advanced Finishing Polish after the #7 treatment because the paint was incredible thin which I document in this article.
Wayne Carini 1953 Hudson Hornet Original Paint Restored by Mike Phillips
The rest of the car was machine polished using a VERY SAFE tool, the Porter Cable 7424XP with simple flat faced foam polishing pads and only the Pinnacle Advanced Swirl Remover and Advanced Finishing Polish. The compound was not needed.
The results speak for themselves....
It was
IMPORTANT to Wayne
to preserve the original paint.
The car would lose a lot of it's value as an ALL ORIGINAL car if it had to be
re-painted.
Note that this was the first time I met Wayne and worked on any of his cars. He was very hesitant to let ANYONE touch his baby. After working on a Ferrari and a 1959 Corvette plus demonstrating what could be done on the Hudson I earned his trust and that's how you get to work on cool cars owned by cool guys like Wayne Carini.
So to answer your question about working by hand and working by machine,
You're going to
start out working by hand. The #7 rub-out simply doesn't work by machine. The paint likes to be hand rubbed by the human hand with terry cloth.
AFTER the #7 IF you or the owner of the car thinks trying to do some machine polishing is the right direction to go then that's when you do some testing, dial in a process that creates the results you're looking for and then move on to stage 2 of the paint restoration process and machine polish the paint.
If you do a lot of compounding, for example you feel there's plenty of paint to work with, then after all the machine steps are completed then you can hand or machine apply a follow-up application of the #7 to fully saturate and gorge the newly abraded and uncovered single stage paint and then apply a traditional carnauba finishing wax like the Pinnacle Souveran Paste Wax.
For the follow-up application of #7 you can do tis using simple foam applicator pads or a soft foam polishing or finishing pad on a very simple DA polisher like the Porter Cable 7424XP.
I wish I could be there to show how to do each of these steps but I have the utmost confidence in
Curtis at Clarity Auto Detail as he told me he's read my article and restored the antique paint on some BMW's owned by the late Paul Walker with great success.
I also have complete confidence in
Vargas aka refreshauto as he has taken my Detailing Boot Camp Class and was a part of the team that did this,
How to restore single stage paint - Advanced Detailing Class
Here's my Detailing Boot Camp Class that did this paint restoration... looks like a brand new paint job if you ask me....
Here's the deal, you don't know what you can do, (or what you'll need as it relates to compounds and polishes), until you try.
That's why Chip has a collection of products. You can't test if you don't have anything to test with.
I also have the utmost confidence in all the rest of our forum members that have volunteered to be a part of this project.
Guys that hang out on AutogeekOnline gain the most important tool in their arsenal and that's knowledge. Of course they back-up their knowledge with hands-on experience but professional quality work starts with head knowledge. You have to
know what you're doing before you start doing.
I'm already looking forward to the after pictures from this project. This is an
epic detail project in the forum world and
bragging rights for everyone involved.
:dblthumb2: