Accumulator said:
I've used Meguiar's M05 New Car Glaze and 3M Imperial Hand Glaze for fresh paint and never had a problem, but both need redone after every wash. BUT NOW...
After some testing, Ford has approved Optimum Car Wax for use on "post-production paintwork". OK, probably good enough for me, though we'll see if I REALLY reach for that instead of the M05 when I actually clean the car up.
3. You shouldn't have to clay the fresh paint; it shouldn't be contaminated unless the car went through some kind of unusual circumstances. But yeah, you can do it, just watch out for marring as the paint might be a little soft.
I thought Meg's Ultimate Liquid Wax was technically a sealant since it's synthetic? I could try M05 too.
I just want to give the new clear coat a layer of protection since this is my daily driver, and I don't have a garage, just a car cover.
I looked up the Optimum, which appears to be a spray wax. That doesn't seem like it would give as much protection, so I see why you would apply after every wash, but I just want to make sure the clear is protected until it hardens.
Jesstzn said:
Ford and "post production" , wouldn't that only apply to Ford doing paint correction themselves? Not every body shop? Ford wouldn't know what other shops were doing?
OP.. Ask your painter how long to wait to do M21 etc.. He knows. Also after M21 etc a wax isn't needed.
Sorry I didn't specify, the body shop that's repairing it is at a Ford dealership, and they do the painting in house. I had the car towed halfway across the St. Louis metro area because I know this place does good work.
I moved a year ago and had major issues when the local dealership outsourced my body work on my hood (small ding off the lot). The place they sent the car left compound (at least they claim it was compound; white specs) all over the car and under the hood. I never got it cleaned out under the hood completely, and it took hours of claying to get it off the body. They also cleared over dust which left little bumps. And every single time it rained, if I didn't use my cover, the areas they worked on would be covered in waterspots that were impossible to remove by hand. I had to keep taking it in so they could compound/polish it off by machine. Yet, despite the fact it only occurred where they painted, they refused to admit any fault, told me my trees must have weird sap.
^^^This is why I am so paranoid about protecting my clear coat this time. :blink:
Accumulator said:
With regard to "ask the painter", I generally end up schooling body/paint guys more often than they school me...and I patronize pretty decent shops.
David Fermani- Haeh heh, yeah some, uhm....careful wording might've just made it come across as an explicit endorsement (given my casual reading of the info), if you know what I mean.
FWIW...I just applied OCW to the fresh paint on the A8's front bumper cover. It doesn't seem to be stupid-soft and, well, I want something better than a glaze on it for daily-driver duty. Hey, it's not like it's gonna really [mess] with it in the sense of clouding/failing/etc. and I washed it marring-free at its current level of hardness, so I don't feel like I'm running a big risk.
Hell, I'm a newb and I've had various shops tell me such a wide variety of answers, I know at least some of them are full of it.
Although, the manager of a local Ford body shop used to own a detailing shop. He told me whenever I get body work done, apply a coat of protection immediately.
What do you mean it wasn't stupid-soft? Like your new clear coat? I don't even know how to tell. I'm guessing it's safer to do stuff to it if it's less soft.
What is the risk with waxing it anyway? Is it because I could damage it when removing the wax?