Topless Mustang getting the Finest love

richy

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This gentleman found my via my website and wanted the Finest for his baby. He's been wanting a convertible Mustang for years and finally indulged. He wanted it to look as good as possible and have the best protection available for it as well. I had that covered! This was going to be a wheels off job too. Luckily he was able to bring it to me a day early which was great as I spent two very late nights working on it as it was.

Here it is as it arrived:





The front of this car had a serious appetite for bugs!!





Hmmmm..yummy!!!


















There were some serious tar issues on the barrels which weren't readily visible from the outside:




I was looking forward to polishing these babies!





I see some Dlux in your future...






I started with the wheels. The barrels were cleaned with Tarminator followed by Zep Citrus. The tires were cleaned with Zep 505 and the faces were cleaned with Zep Citrus and Megs HW. The wells were cleaned with LATA.

The car was then washed with 3D Pink soap which was followed by a decontamination wash of IronX paste. It was brought inside and clayed and was then blown off with my Master Blaster.


Here's what the hood looked like...boy, did it turn out to be a terrible challenge!!











Lots of chips to fill too:














There were other chips too, but you get the point. First up was to remove the wheels. The barrels had a lot of tar chunks that were stuck to the surface like with super glue. It took Tarminator and a plastic eraser to break them free. Each wheel had wheel weight rubber on it too. After an intensive cleaning, I polished the barrel with my Megs DA and a 4" B/S yellow pad + Perfect Finish. That did a beautiful job. I then chemically cleaned it with DG Squeaky Clean before coating it with Finest. These wheels took a lot longer than normal due to the PITA tar.
The faces were hand polished with Essence and then was double coated with Finest just like the barrels. The calipers, although not a glossy paint, still said Brembo on them and were coated as well. The plastic wells were also coated with a DG trim coating. Here is a wheel in progress:













Guess who was too lazy to get out his tripod??








Once the wheels were re-installed and torqued to spec, it was time to play with some paint. I tried my 3D black wool pad with the 3401 + M100 and it did very little. The swirls were very deep and that was combined with a rock hard paint. It laughed at that combo. I even tried my rotary with it. Nada. I then tried going very aggressive using Menzerna Power Gloss, but it left its own marks and still did not remove everything. I ended up using M101 straight (cutting it didn't work) with my black wool pad + 3401. It needed several passes (sometimes 3 or 4) but it seemed to be the best compromise. Even with that many passes, I wasn't getting everything. I spent a ridiculous 4 hours on the hood and got it pretty damned good, but not perfect. The deck lid was a similar challenge. Even the sides took M101 for the top parts to remove most scratches. I don't like using it straight as it gums up the pad far worse than M100 or 105 do, but it was the best option. I ended up having to wash out the wool pad after about every panel. That was followed by M205 + CarPro Gloss pad + 3401. Here is the back part after M100 + M205. I was liking the fun house mirror effect:





The car was then double coated with CQuartz Finest. The trim at the back got Dlux. The windshield got Fly By Forte. The exhaust tips were polished with 0000 steel wool + M205 and were coated with Dlux too. The convertible top was treated with DG 341 for waterproofing. It also seemed to darken it up a bit too. The remaining glass was also coated with Finest. After a ridiculous 27 hours, here it is:











Ya baby!!!








Polished pony
































Thanks for looking!
 
Car looks boring,how many hrs do you have in the stang.
 
30 hrs is way to long,was that with lunch and bathroom breaks.
 
Awesome turn around rich looks sweet!
I wonder why it was so hard to correct? I just got my g21 and starting to worry it wont correct certain cars.
Do you ever use microfiber pads?
 
I personally don't see how it can take 30 to 40 hrs to detail a car,that's insane.
 
I just finished up a navy commander airplane,took me 16 hrs.compound polished and fuzion .paint was really hard to work with.1800 see ya
 
Great job. How does M101 do as far as dusting for you? And how did you like 3D Pink? TIA
 
Great job Richy! Really hard paint is a pita! But you did it.

@GSKR for as much as you detail "aircraft" and seem to have a stupid response for everything, you sure have a lot of time to post on this forum.
 
Great work on that Mustang. That car needed a lot of love. Skill and time are needed, that is what sets a professional quality detailer above an average one.
 
I personally don't see how it can take 30 to 40 hrs to detail a car,that's insane.

I do! Here's a response of mine from another recent thread questioning how long should it take...

(Re: Pros, how long do you take to do a "full detail" on a sedan?)

I'm the wrong guy to ask this question (I recently spent around 30-40 hours over a 5-day period detailing my truck and it wasn't very bad to begin with) but I'm going to chime in anyways.

I've seen this and similar questions asked a million times about a variety of tasks and here's my take... The better a job you do the more time it takes. Period! Attention-to-Detail takes time.

Although absolute perfection is impossible, many strive for it. I know I do. Every time I do something I try to do it better than the time before and that usually means it takes longer. While there are some time savings that can be realized by working efficiently and developing/improving your processes, quality costs.

I think the key here is "what are your expectations" for the finished product? Assuming "perfect" to be 100%, are you looking for 75%, 80%, 90%, or 99.9%? The time it takes to meet expectations goes up exponentially the higher your expectations are. Getting from 80% to 90% might take longer than the initial 0% to 80%. And then from 90% to 99.9% will take even more time and effort. Only you (and/or your customer) can determine what the expectation level is going to be and how much time/money is reasonable to achieve it.

In a nutshell, whether the answer to the original question is 4 hours or 4 days, they are both correct. It just depends on your own level of attention-to-detail, your own definition of perfection, your own expectations, and your own definition of what constitutes a "full detail" as those can vary quite a bit from person to person.
 
Awesome turn around rich looks sweet!
I wonder why it was so hard to correct? I just got my g21 and starting to worry it wont correct certain cars.
Do you ever use microfiber pads?

It was a combination of very hard paint and very deep swirls. There almost seemed to be different swirls at different levels..it was weird. You'd correct what was most prevalent only to discover more and different looking scratching underneath. Yes, I have, and I don't like them generally. The wool is more aggressive than they are and also has the huge benefit of finishing down better. As for your case, you honestly won't know what will work until you try it. It depends on what you're seeing with what lighting you've got and how picky you want to be.

Great job. How does M101 do as far as dusting for you? And how did you like 3D Pink? TIA
It was dusting, but not crazy. I was running the 3401 at lower speeds to try to keep the heat down on it. I was using a lot of downward force to compensate and get me the results I wanted.
3D pink was great. The only beef I have is that you need 5X's as much as Hyper Wash for a 5 gal bucket.

Great job Richy! Really hard paint is a pita! But you did it.

@GSKR for as much as you detail "aircraft" and seem to have a stupid response for everything, you sure have a lot of time to post on this forum.
Thanks Don. I almost didn't even respond to his first rude response, and made the mistake of feeding a troll. I ignore idiots on the job and have ignored him ever since his first comment. Feeding into the hand of a goof only makes it worse.

Great job as always Richy!
Thank you Marc!

Nice work, pics and write up!
Thanks kindly for the comment and for taking the time to do so.

I'm never keen on blue for cars, aside from Ford's "Grabber Blue", but I must say you did this blue pony justice.

Nice job Richy.
Thanks very much Paul.

Great work on that Mustang. That car needed a lot of love. Skill and time are needed, that is what sets a professional quality detailer above an average one.
Thanks Eddie. It did, and the owner really appreciated the time and effort that went into making it so much better.

I do! Here's a response of mine from another recent thread questioning how long should it take...

(Re: Pros, how long do you take to do a "full detail" on a sedan?)

I'm the wrong guy to ask this question (I recently spent around 30-40 hours over a 5-day period detailing my truck and it wasn't very bad to begin with) but I'm going to chime in anyways.

I've seen this and similar questions asked a million times about a variety of tasks and here's my take... The better a job you do the more time it takes. Period! Attention-to-Detail takes time.

Although absolute perfection is impossible, many strive for it. I know I do. Every time I do something I try to do it better than the time before and that usually means it takes longer. While there are some time savings that can be realized by working efficiently and developing/improving your processes, quality costs.

I think the key here is "what are your expectations" for the finished product? Assuming "perfect" to be 100%, are you looking for 75%, 80%, 90%, or 99.9%? The time it takes to meet expectations goes up exponentially the higher your expectations are. Getting from 80% to 90% might take longer than the initial 0% to 80%. And then from 90% to 99.9% will take even more time and effort. Only you (and/or your customer) can determine what the expectation level is going to be and how much time/money is reasonable to achieve it.

In a nutshell, whether the answer to the original question is 4 hours or 4 days, they are both correct. It just depends on your own level of attention-to-detail, your own definition of perfection, your own expectations, and your own definition of what constitutes a "full detail" as those can vary quite a bit from person to person.

See my comment to Don about feeding trolls. He doesn't want an answer, but to show his superiority. I will gladly answer any question asked in good faith.

Great job!!


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Thanks kindly.
 
Beautiful work. Hopefully, your customer will maintain the paint better now, and it won;t be as bad the next time you see it
 
Great work as always Richy - enjoy your writeups.

I know everyone enjoys paint but you really know how to get wheels clean!
 
Great transformation Richy, thanks for sharing.


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