sirduncan773
New member
So here is my story...
I have been doing this for 5 years now and have worked on hundreds of paint jobs but this one has me going nuts.
I'm correcting the paint on a black Lincoln Continental and I'm on the final step (WAXING) and when I remove the wax off of the paint, it keeps leaving extremely fine lines in the paint that only go in the direction of the towel. Before waxing the car the paint looked perfect with no hologramming or anything in the paint, maybe because I wash the car between every step. If that is so, how do I get the wax off without screwing up the paint?... UGH
I used brand new Griots Garage micro fibers which are super soft and Zymol Concours Glaze. I tried using other high carnuba waxes but nothing seems to work.
The car was painted about 5 years ago so I know fresh paint isn't the issue, so maybe there isn't enough hardener in the clear coat?
Does anybody have a tip or trick to help me get through this? I'm already 16 hours into this car and I'm ready to move on to my next client.
I have been doing this for 5 years now and have worked on hundreds of paint jobs but this one has me going nuts.
I'm correcting the paint on a black Lincoln Continental and I'm on the final step (WAXING) and when I remove the wax off of the paint, it keeps leaving extremely fine lines in the paint that only go in the direction of the towel. Before waxing the car the paint looked perfect with no hologramming or anything in the paint, maybe because I wash the car between every step. If that is so, how do I get the wax off without screwing up the paint?... UGH
I used brand new Griots Garage micro fibers which are super soft and Zymol Concours Glaze. I tried using other high carnuba waxes but nothing seems to work.
The car was painted about 5 years ago so I know fresh paint isn't the issue, so maybe there isn't enough hardener in the clear coat?
Does anybody have a tip or trick to help me get through this? I'm already 16 hours into this car and I'm ready to move on to my next client.