lennster said:
Thanks for the help my friends...I looked at my hood at lunch today
and did notice some minor swirling. What can i use to remove them ?
What do ya'll recommend????
You have to ask yourself a few questions.
- What types of results do you want
- Show car shine?
- Daily driver?
- Is it stored in a garage?
- Are you doing this by hand or machine?
- How much time are you willing to invest?
- How much money?
Well, first I'd give it a really good wash using the two bucket system. This is where it helps to stop and protect from swirls instead of instilling them even further.
After you've washed, clay the entire car section at a time to ensure its as smooth as glass. To check, put your hand in a plastic baggie (ziploc) and run your finger tips along the paint and see if it feels smooth. If so, you're doing the job correct. If not you may need a few more passes of the clay.
After clay, give the car a good rinse and then dry it done using either a Water Magnet or Microfibre Towel.
From here, I'd use a good paint cleaner. Remember, least aggressive product first. A good product you can try is Meguiars M80. Do a test spot on the hood to see if this gets the results you want.
Tape off a 12 x 12 section and use M80 on the section. Remove it and inspect in good light or sunlight. If you're happy with those results, then you'll be able to produce those results on the entire car.
Remember, with M80, you do not need to let it dry. Its a apply and then take off type of product right away. Work a panel at a time.
Once you've completed this, since M80 contains so many polishing oils you won't really need to use a pure polish. You can if you wish and or have time, but not totally needed.
If you want, following your paint cleaner you will go straight to wax, or polish and then wax.
Hope that helps.
Wash
Clay
Paint CLeaner
Paint Polish
Wax