UK Detailing.......

justin_murphy

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I'm a member at Detailing Word.......a UK detailing forum. These guys take detailing seriously. I thought I'd share one of their posts here.

"Polished Bliss Vs 330bhp Audi S3 + Zymol"

Well, this car made me earn my wages thats for sure!

The owner contacted me on one of the Audi Forums last month saying he wanted the full works on his car as he wanted it ready for the up and coming show season. He also said not to worry too much about the wheels as they are just his winter ones and some new ones were on the way anyways
smile.gif


Here's the car on arrival:
CS3f.jpg

CS3b.jpg

CS3a.jpg


I took nearly 2 hours to wash and clay the car as it was VERY rough, despite having come from the body shop not too long ago. The owner told me what areas had been re-sprayed which were the majority of the car bar the roof. He also told me where the Bodywork had been done and i immediately began to worry as i know this particular body shop have big ovens that they bake the cars in once painted so i knew the paint could well be very hard indeed....

Anyways, the car was put inside and i taped it up and then inspected the condition of the paint under the halogens. I was expecting the usual Rotary Holograms, which there were plenty of, but there were also some very bad scratches on just about every panel and the paint was generally pretty fecked. Swirls and cob-webbing were not going to be the biggest problem in this detail thats for sure!

CS3x.jpg

CS3w.jpg

CS3v.jpg

CS3p.jpg


Next step was to take paint readings. The car in general was showing the usual 200-280 microns associated with a re-spray, the bonnet was 120 average so i assumed it must have been a new panel as the owner told me it was part of the car that had been re-sprayed (he later confirmed that it was a new bonnet
smile.gif
) I got a shock reading on one piece of the car though:
CS3l.jpg




Well, this car made me earn my wages thats for sure!

The owner contacted me on one of the Audi Forums last month saying he wanted the full works on his car as he wanted it ready for the up and coming show season. He also said not to worry too much about the wheels as they are just his winter ones and some new ones were on the way anyways
smile.gif


Here's the car on arrival:

CS3f.jpg


CS3b.jpg


CS3a.jpg




 
I took nearly 2 hours to wash and clay the car as it was VERY rough, despite having come from the body shop not too long ago. The owner told me what areas had been re-sprayed which were the majority of the car bar the roof. He also told me where the Bodywork had been done and i immediately began to worry as i know this particular body shop have big ovens that they bake the cars in once painted so i knew the paint could well be very hard indeed....

Anyways, the car was put inside and i taped it up and then inspected the condition of the paint under the halogens. I was expecting the usual Rotary Holograms, which there were plenty of, but there were also some very bad scratches on just about every panel and the paint was generally pretty fecked. Swirls and cob-webbing were not going to be the biggest problem in this detail thats for sure!

CS3x.jpg


CS3w.jpg


CS3v.jpg


CS3p.jpg

 
Next step was to take paint readings. The car in general was showing the usual 200-280 microns associated with a re-spray, the bonnet was 120 average so i assumed it must have been a new panel as the owner told me it was part of the car that had been re-sprayed (he later confirmed that it was a new bonnet
smile.gif
) I got a shock reading on one piece of the car though:

CS3l.jpg


I figured i hadnt held the probe down on the paint properly so took another reading but this only confirmed there was a very low spot on the near side rear arch, a 2 or 3 square cm area averaging 55 microns
eek.gif
Needless to say this got taped up and I HD Cleansed it 4 times once the polishing stage had been done.

To try and Tackle the defects i went with the stronger of the 2 finishing polishes with the Rotary @1500rpm, the paint just laughed at me with this so i stepped up to the compound @1700rpm and a polishing pad and this had a pretty good effect. Although to get a result i was happy with most areas needed at least 3 hits, with the roof and bonnet needing 4! This paint was without a doubt the hardest paint ive ever come across and it was mentally challenging as well as physically, its quite soul destroying having to go at the same section up to 3 or 4 times lol!

All in, nearly 10 hours of solid machine polishing was needed before i was happy. I eventually had to give up at leaving a couple of random scratches that just werent going to come out.

Top of tailgate before:

CS32.jpg


top of tailgate after:

CS33.jpg



N/S Wing before:

CS3m.jpg


N/S Wing after:

CS3q.jpg



Holograms on A-Pillar before:

CS3j.jpg


Holograms on A-Pillar after:

CS3g.jpg
 
The car was then Final Polished with the least aggressive of finishing polishes and a finishing pad @1200rpm's.

After that I then HD Cleanses all the paint and glass, and applied Zymol Vintage to all paint and exterior platsics/rubbers, buffed off and then highlighted the leading edges of the cars panels.

Whilst any remaining oils rose to the surface i applied sealant to the alloys, dressed the tyres, (arches were dressed outside after the wash stage), detailed the interior and fed the leather with Zymol treat.

Exhaust tips were also polished:

before:

CS3i.jpg


after:

CS3k.jpg



Once that was done the car received a final wipe down with Zymol Field Glaze to remove any oils and smears
cool.gif
 
And here's the afters:

CS3c.jpg


CS35.jpg


CS34.jpg


CS3t.jpg


CS3n.jpg


CS31.jpg


CS3z.jpg


CS3y.jpg


CS3s.jpg


CS3r.jpg


CS3e.jpg


CS3d.jpg


CS3o.jpg



Total work time was 16 hours and it felt like a hell of a long detail purely just because of the length of time needed to correct the paint, but it goes to show that its all in the preperation as I was extremely happy with the end result, as was the owner who has now signed up to a monthly maintainance contract
thumb.gif


Thanks for looking
smile.gif
 
justin30513 said:
These guys take detailing seriously

:eek: :eek: Wow you weren't kidding about being serious about there detailing. That's a pro at work. Very detailed description and I enjoyed the step by step lay out. That is one heck of a turn around in that vehicle....very nice vehicle by the way.

Thank you for sharing Justin, very nice work...who ever did that.




 
This......

CS3f.jpg


to this is awesome!

CS3r.jpg



CS3a.jpg



CS3d.jpg

wow.....big difference!
 
Last edited:
Wow that is awesome i love it, that color looks great
 
That is some unbelievable work! My brother has an A3, great great cars! Pure S E X with those BBS rims!!!
 
Just remember how hard the clear is on these things. Like an f'ing rock! Like I said, these guys are serious detailer or valet's over there!
 
what I like best on the after pics is the depth and wetness the carnauba produced. Man sealants rock, but still cannot do the deed.
 
First 3 posts are repeats I believe. That's some gooood work.
 
I think he used vintage on that one, works out about just over $3000 for it
 
They are using fine, high end carnaubas, with spectacular results. If you are are nauba lover (like me), it is worth to take a look. Fantastic optical range, silky smooth gloss with sharp, high definition reflections... Only carnauba can produce these results.
 
Thanks for those posts, gave me a good paint depth gauge to research.

The bottom line built in probe from that model posted was $600. Works on all ferrous material.
 
Justin, you could have done that in 6 hours:D . They must have used #831 on the exhaust tips. Awesome car and work!
Thanks for posting!
 
Nice UK work ther....

Porsche calipers on some Audis, but i have not seen them on a S3 before, only the RS4, may have been from a RS4.

Audi has used porsche parts on their high perfomance cars since mid 90`s i think. The brakes on the new RS4 is some of the best, even "better" aftermarket brakes has less stopping power than the "standard" RS4 brakes.
 
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