Restoring white paint on my 4,000 mile 'Barn Find' '62 Rambler
I recently acquired a 4,052 mile 1962 Rambler Station Wagon that has essentially been sitting in a garage for the past 50 years.
I had it shipped from Northern Minnesota to my home in Chicago where my mechanic has serviced it and a new set of Coker tires have been installed. Now the fun but difficult part of detailing the car has begun.
Luckily I came across Mike Phillips thread about restoring single stage paint and I've begun my process using M7 exclusively so far with outstanding results but I can see that I have some challenges as well.
Here it is after its first wash:
View attachment 57097
And the results after lots of M7 elbow grease, a terry cloth towel and a few overnight M7 applications:
View attachment 57098
You can see the 'unfinished' door on the left and the finished results on the right:
View attachment 57099
So here's my first challenge. After all my initial work I still have plenty of of yellow oxidation. It's subtle but it's there. In fact in sunlight you can't detect it but in the shade you see it.
I believe the factory paint is a pretty pure white which in spots I can see but after all these applications I can see there is still plenty of work to do. I know the nature of white paint is hard but should I continue with M7 applications or go to something that will cut the paint more?

I recently acquired a 4,052 mile 1962 Rambler Station Wagon that has essentially been sitting in a garage for the past 50 years.
I had it shipped from Northern Minnesota to my home in Chicago where my mechanic has serviced it and a new set of Coker tires have been installed. Now the fun but difficult part of detailing the car has begun.
Luckily I came across Mike Phillips thread about restoring single stage paint and I've begun my process using M7 exclusively so far with outstanding results but I can see that I have some challenges as well.
Here it is after its first wash:
View attachment 57097
And the results after lots of M7 elbow grease, a terry cloth towel and a few overnight M7 applications:
View attachment 57098
You can see the 'unfinished' door on the left and the finished results on the right:
View attachment 57099
So here's my first challenge. After all my initial work I still have plenty of of yellow oxidation. It's subtle but it's there. In fact in sunlight you can't detect it but in the shade you see it.
I believe the factory paint is a pretty pure white which in spots I can see but after all these applications I can see there is still plenty of work to do. I know the nature of white paint is hard but should I continue with M7 applications or go to something that will cut the paint more?
