Hello everyone.
I just bought my 1st brand new car in May. It's a 2011 Dodge Charger R/T Max in brilliant black (with metal fleck). I have been consumed with maintaining it's showroom appearance. I wash it weekly with Mother's California Gold car wash, 2 microfiber wash mitts, and 2 gritguard wash buckets. For spot cleaning, I use Mother's Showtime Instant Detailer and microfiber towels. I have never detailed or even waxed a car before, so all of this is new to me.
I have watched the YouTube videos for car detailing, including Mike Phillip's videos. I was so convinced that I could do detail my car based off of what I watched and read, that I purchased:
On Friday, I washed and claybarred the car. Saturday, I spent all day waxing the car with the step 1 cleaner wax, the Porter Cable 7424XP, and I started with the white pads but then switched to the black pads. I ended up with a lot of white residual dust, that I removed with the detail spray and microfiber.
On Sunday, I intended to do step 2 (glaze and sealant) but I goofed and grabbed the step 3 (carnauba wax) by mistake. I didn't realize my mistake until I was halfway done with the car. I finished the car with the step 3, PC, and blue pads.
The car has an amazing, wet looking shine! The metal fleck really stands out more than it has since I bought the car! Here's the but, I have spiderwebs, and scratches everywhere that I can only see under certain light, but when I can, it makes the hood, doors, trunk, and rear bumper look really bad. I am not sure what I did wrong. There were a few lines in the paint before I started, but now I have full blown swirl patterns.
Any ideas about what I did wrong and advice on how to correct the problems? Professional detailing really isn't an option unless I go to the dealer. The professional detail shops, near where I live, do not use 2 bucket washing, grit guards, and one of the shop managers told me "they do not clay paint, they buff it."
Sorry for the length of the post and thanks for any help you guys can give.
I just bought my 1st brand new car in May. It's a 2011 Dodge Charger R/T Max in brilliant black (with metal fleck). I have been consumed with maintaining it's showroom appearance. I wash it weekly with Mother's California Gold car wash, 2 microfiber wash mitts, and 2 gritguard wash buckets. For spot cleaning, I use Mother's Showtime Instant Detailer and microfiber towels. I have never detailed or even waxed a car before, so all of this is new to me.
I have watched the YouTube videos for car detailing, including Mike Phillip's videos. I was so convinced that I could do detail my car based off of what I watched and read, that I purchased:
- Porter Cable 7424XP
- Lake Country CCS 6.5" pads: 1 yellow, 1 orange, 1 green, 2 white, 2 blue, 2 black, and 1 red.
- Mother's California Gold Clay Bar kit
- Mother's California Gold Ultimate 3-step wax system.
On Friday, I washed and claybarred the car. Saturday, I spent all day waxing the car with the step 1 cleaner wax, the Porter Cable 7424XP, and I started with the white pads but then switched to the black pads. I ended up with a lot of white residual dust, that I removed with the detail spray and microfiber.
On Sunday, I intended to do step 2 (glaze and sealant) but I goofed and grabbed the step 3 (carnauba wax) by mistake. I didn't realize my mistake until I was halfway done with the car. I finished the car with the step 3, PC, and blue pads.
The car has an amazing, wet looking shine! The metal fleck really stands out more than it has since I bought the car! Here's the but, I have spiderwebs, and scratches everywhere that I can only see under certain light, but when I can, it makes the hood, doors, trunk, and rear bumper look really bad. I am not sure what I did wrong. There were a few lines in the paint before I started, but now I have full blown swirl patterns.
Any ideas about what I did wrong and advice on how to correct the problems? Professional detailing really isn't an option unless I go to the dealer. The professional detail shops, near where I live, do not use 2 bucket washing, grit guards, and one of the shop managers told me "they do not clay paint, they buff it."
Sorry for the length of the post and thanks for any help you guys can give.