Does anyone have any suggestions on how to keep their car looking new? Getting rid of water spots?
Does anyone have any suggestions on how to keep their car looking new? Getting rid of water spots?
water spot or water etching?
Whats the Difference? I thought water etching was what was left after water has been evaporated on the surface?
a water spot is nothing more then a mineral deposit that is left after the water evaporated
water etching has actually "eaten" some of the clearcoat/paint
and need to be polished or coumpounded or wetsanded to fix it
O okay, how is the best way to get rid of water spots?
sometimes a simple wash will take care of it
you might try a QD
or vinegar car disolve the mineral deposit but it needs some dwel time to work
also I have not used it but several members on here like:
Danase water Spot Remover - The safe way to remove water spots
Chemical Guys also makes a water spot removal product, have not used it myself but im sure someone can tell you how well it works.
Distilled white vinegar has done the trick for me.
-Jordan
Over the Top Detailing
Originally Posted by DetailnByDustn
You`re kidding, right? In that other thread you told us you have your own business and you`ve detailed over 100 cars. Don`t your customers come and ask YOU this question? :think: Or are you playing us now?
use Klasse AIO with a buffer and black pad, works great on removing all water spots
I use PB Black Hole on a black or white pad to remove mineral spots on my black DDs.
[quote name=`ptaylor_9849`] Black is not a color, it`s a part time job. Patrick[/QUOTE]
Originally Posted by shine
How do you apply the vinegar wouldn`t that hurt your paint?
Danase Water Spot Remover (period).
I had massive hard water etching all over my black, hard clear coated Impala SS. This stuff knocked it down like nothing! I don`t think there is any other product on the market that can remove something embedded in paint the way this stuff does.
DG
Originally Posted by DetailnByDustn
Mist a some onto a microfiber towel and lightly wipe the surface. You can also dilute this down to at least 2:1 water:vinegar. I only do this if a wash and clay does not take care of the spots. As Jim mentioned, if the spots are etched they need to be removed by something abrasive--polish/compound, or in the worst of cases, wet sanding.
-Jordan
Over the Top Detailing
Originally Posted by DetailnByDustn
Vinegar is a pretty weak acid, it shouldn`t hurt autopaint at all.
Consider that the acidic step of decontamination systems is a *LOT* more potent and still doesn`t do any damage (well, as long as you use it right, never hurt anything for me).
Note that some etching gets so deep that the only answer is wetsanding, and in those cases *I* just live with it instead of over-thinning the clear. I have that on the roof of my wife`s A8 and on the horizontal surfaces of the Yukon, which was apparently parked outside 24/7 and never waxed while the first owner had it.
How to keep daily drivers looking new? Treat them the same as garage-queens and they`ll stay nice. Just has to be done more often and you might want to use a higher durability LSP.
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