Ok guys... @MarkD51 would you mind putting together a list for me? I want to detail the interior and on the outside I want to clay, seal and wax as well as get my tires taken care of as well as the engine bay. Also need to get the water spots off the glass but I can use the clay for that. Include the kinds of towels are applicator pads as well. I'd greatly appreciate it! I have Autozone, Advance Auto, Car Quest and O'Riley all within 2 miles. Again I am trying to keep it at $100 or less. Thanks!
EDIT: I read somewhere that it's good to wax your headlights as well to protect them from fading. Does anyone else do this?
I'd say for a wax-sealant product, get the Duragloss #501 Marine-RV Sealant if you can find it at carquest. While you're there, see just how many products you can get from them, like their tire-rubber, or vinyl products. The #501 will work well on the white pickup, as there's lot's of cleaning power in this formula, and will help clean the paint.
The Mother's Clay Bar, last time I bought comes with two small bars, and a bottle of clay bar lube, cost about $20. Each Bar is good for one vehicle. I really wouldn't try stretching it more than this, expecially if you find the clay is getting loaded with dirts.
Keep in mind, you drop the clay anywhere, and trust me, it can be real easy to do, you have to chuck it in the trash, otherwise, you'll smear pieces of grit, small rocks across your paint forever damaging it.
You may find after claying one car with one of the bars, that there isn't too much clay lube left to use with the other bar. You can simply substitute with the relatively cheap Meguairs Detail Spray that comes in the red bottle at about $5 or so per pint. This works perfectly fine, and basically, that's all these clay lube sprays often are, a detailing spray.
As I said for carpet, and upholstery, Folex from Home Depot for about $5-$6 for a qt, but what can and will also work, is a regular carpet shampoo such as Bissel, or Hoover Brand, gotten from Walmart-etc. They would need to be diluted, and I would suggest after cleaning seats and carpeting, to again go over the cleaned areas, with clear warm water with a small clean wash towel since you probably don't have a means to extract them. Even a spray can shampoo such as Glory, or Blue Coral product can work in a pinch, and is probably better than nothing.
Having a good fine polish is nice to have. Meguiars 205 that I've seen in stores commonly comes in quarts, it's a lot of product to have on hand, at about $22-$26/qt.
Perhaps someone else can suggest another smaller quantity megs product of similar qualities from one of their other lines commonly available?
Yes, you can wax any chromed plastics, but as far as things like headlight, and tail light housings, always keep in mind that they do have protective UV coatings on them. That if you use any aggressive and abrasive means of polishing them, you'll take that coating right off.
With that coating gone, they will yellow and haze at a much faster pace.
Use the gentlest means possible if those parts still look good. Unless you have some god awful stuff stuck to the lights, I'd stay away from them with clay bars, polishes. The DG #501 will work fine on them.
As for car soaps, shampoos, I'd stick with using a decent brand of specific car products. Mothers, megs, there's literal 100's of such products, but as I earlier mentioned, the DG 901 Car Shampoo is good
FInd some nice soft MF Towels, that have a soft nap. Wally World often has some 5 packs at a decent price which aren't too bad, and are usable.
Mark