I was on the fence about posting this, as the process is really nothing remarkable, but it's a cool car, so why not.
The car belongs to a loyal client and friend of mine, some of you may remember the detail I did on his
'72 Dino last fall. It's an all original '96 (as he says, but I have my doubts) with 25k miles on it and he keeps it in very good shape. He is a bit of a detailer himself and was dead set on the products I was to use, as he says nothing makes it look better. I argued this statement, but eventually gave in. I was on spring break this week and didn't really want to do a full correction, especially on something with so many intricate curves and panels.
Method and products are as follows:
-ONR/IPA wipe down
-Griots Garage #2 via PC7424, white pad, speed 5 (client supplied)
-3M Imperial Hand Glaze (client supplied)
-P21S wax (blue top)
-Rejex (on wheels)
-303 Aerospace (on tires)
-Optimum Metal Polish (pink)
-Einmann Fabrik glass cleaner
-Lexol cleaner and conditioner
-Poorboy's Leather Scent/odor eliminator
-1Z Gummi Pfledge
The car had been stored under a cover for several months, but was still a bit dusty. On a whole, the car was in great shape, but did have some light swirling, a few bugs on the front, and some wax in the cracks. It had some great gloss to begin with.
BEFORE
The interior wasn't too bad, just really needed a good brush and vacuum.
He had requested that I thoroughly measure the paint as he was worried he may have polished it too much in the past. He has polished it by hand about 3-4 times previously. :rofl:
The readings all came up very healthy, with no abnormalities. Horizontal panels ranged from ~7-10 mils and vertical panels were only slightly thinner.
The one unfortunate thing I found was a crack running around the base of both the rear B pillars,
Here are a few "during" pictures,
The Griot's polish did a fine job of removing the swirls, I doubt I would pick it up for use in my usual arsenal, but there was nothing wrong with it.
These are before glazing and waxing, although I did not do an IPA wipe-down to check for fillers in the polish. I was going to glaze it afterwards, I didn't see the point.
The pictures don't show it well, but the RIDS were still plentiful.
I would the 3M glaze a little tricky at first, one drop will be good for about half the hood on a primed applicator. Anything thicker will set like concrete and be a bit difficult to remove.
AFTER!
I would actually say this was an enjoyable detail. The car didn't give me any trouble, the weather was awesome, and I got to hang out and work around some very cool cars. Not a bad spring break.