swanicyouth
New member
- Mar 3, 2011
- 9,388
- 0
It amazes me someone will pay 50k for a car and be too cheap to pay 400 bucks for someone who knows what they are doing to bring the finish back to a glossy and scratch free state. I detail as a hobby only, but I think 4-5 hundred is more than fair for a clay, wash, polish, and protect. Maybe it it's just a DD Honda 300 dollars to do an AIO. if I couldn't correct paint myself and one of my cars was swirled, I'd have no problem paying 500, as long as the detailer knew what he was doing and gave me some education on how to keep the car looking swirl free. You guys who do this for a living amaze me, as it takes me several days to do a multi step correction and all the prep work. Plus, think of all the consumable you use up: car wash, detail spray, clay, IRON X, MF towels, pads, compound, polish, LSP(s), tape, wheel cleaner, dressing(s), APC, applicators, etc... That's a lot of stuff to clean, prep, correct, and protect a vehicle. Keep in mind a car isn't a flat piece of painted panel indoors. You are working on something that arrives dirty, contaminated, and often neglected. You have to work around small areas and curves in the body, and crouch in uncomfortable positions for hours sometimes. Then you have to keep everything very clean, as often you may be working in a dirty garage or outside. When your done, you will have to spend time and money to clean your towels, pads, applicators, brushes, buckets, mitts, etc... I'm just saying its a physically demanding job that requires patience, experience, skill, many tools and products.... Don't I undersell your service! Especially if you can take a swirled up car and fix it. To anyone who is into nice vehicles, just that in itself is pretty amazing!