Waterspots on newly coated paint wont come off.

HD.Detailing

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I have a customer that washed his truck for the first time after it was coated and noticed little water spots that won't wash off... it sits outside. He used ONR any ideas how to remedy this?
 
22ple applied Monday.. customer waited just over 24hours before removing this incredibly large truck from the shop where I spent many hours with it.. got rained on and he did an ONR on it today instructions said after intial 8-12 hours of cure it is safe to get wet and washed???

I received a pm from zach after asking for advice, and I am going to go over to wash this beast saturday evening after sun goes down and hopefully remove them if not will then use spotless followed by reload! Wish me luck!

Here she is
DSC_2533_zps6c02c379.jpg
 
Although I am not particularly familiar with 22ple, claying 99.9% of the time will NOT hurt coatings. I would still hit it with Spotless.
 
CarPro Spotless was designed to remove waterspots from coatings

This

I swear by the stuff. I had a customer with the worst hard water spots I've seen and spotless worked. However, his spots were REALLY bad. How I did it was I used spotless per directions then I used the nanoskin and repeated till they were gone. The car turned out looking great. Here are some pics .

The phone app will only allow me to upload the picture in a smaller format so I hope they show the detail. If not look for a post about spotless from me.

Sent from my HTC6435LVW using AG Online
 
Most coatings shouldn't be washed at least 7 days after application for it to be chemically stable. When it got rained on the first thing which he should've done was dry it off and leave it alone. I would also say Spotless to be the fix but unsure on the coating's integrity afterwards as it hasn't had the chance to fully cure
 
Most coatings shouldn't be washed at least 7 days after application for it to be chemically stable. When it got rained on the first thing which he should've done was dry it off and leave it alone. I would also say Spotless to be the fix but unsure on the coating's integrity afterwards as it hasn't had the chance to fully cure

:iagree: I know OCP is not fully cured for at least a week and shouldn't wash it till then.
 
Most coatings shouldn't be washed at least 7 days after application for it to be chemically stable. When it got rained on the first thing which he should've done was dry it off and leave it alone. I would also say Spotless to be the fix but unsure on the coating's integrity afterwards as it hasn't had the chance to fully cure

22ple initial cure 8-12 hours is then safe to get wet and wash as usual (according to instructions) so the coating should be fine... crossing fingers.

I will definetly be telling all the other customers to keep them out of water for a week from here on out!
 
You could try white vinegar first.

That was my first thought but didn't work.. I told him to just hold off on anything else.. i'll be over to rectify it and we would get her looking awesome again. (fortunately he is one of the coolest customers I could ask for!!)
 
As time goes on, the "gotchas" associated with coatings will become more clear. They aren't infallible by any means and in fact present new challenges and issues.
 
I second a lot of the points and suggestions on the thread, namely:

1) The coating should not be washed for 1 week until chemically stable
2) Spotless for waterspots on coatings
3) Silverfox took the words out of my mouth with the "gotchas"

DO NOT clay
DO NOT use vinegar (because the acidity will sure affect the coating)

For future "protection" to your protection, why don't use put a quick coat of Reload on the car/truck before releasing it. This way you have a topper which will be "exposed to the elements" rather than the actual coating. I've done quite a few coatings and this is a process that has yet to fail me.
 
For future "protection" to your protection, why don't use put a quick coat of Reload on the car/truck before releasing it. This way you have a topper which will be "exposed to the elements" rather than the actual coating. I've done quite a few coatings and this is a process that has yet to fail me.


I do this too, but usually wait a week after the first wash and spray some spray wax, but from my understanding or trying to understand.

You apply the coating to a customer's car and then before releasing it to them you top the coating with something like Reload? How long do you usually wait before doing this?

It won't hurt the curing of the coating?

Just wondering and thanks :)
 
I second a lot of the points and suggestions on the thread, namely:

1) The coating should not be washed for 1 week until chemically stable
2) Spotless for waterspots on coatings
3) Silverfox took the words out of my mouth with the "gotchas"

DO NOT clay
DO NOT use vinegar (because the acidity will sure affect the coating)

For future "protection" to your protection, why don't use put a quick coat of Reload on the car/truck before releasing it. This way you have a topper which will be "exposed to the elements" rather than the actual coating. I've done quite a few coatings and this is a process that has yet to fail me.

this is what Zach reccomended as well.. already ordered and will be here Saturday... but I have to wait at least the 8-12 hours for the initial curing with this particular coating?
 
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