Spit shine your car - - - technique revisited

Nick T.

New member
Patent leather shoes have a mirror like reflectivity, but no depth to the shine - much like Zaino on a car. Spit shined shoes have the same mirror like reflectivity, but in addition have an unmatched richness of depth - much like a synthetic topped with a carnauba on your car. Additional spit shined layers add more and more depth.



The problem is how to add layers of shoe polish without softening/removing the underlying layers. Kiwi shoe polish (the choice of expert shoe shiners) has even more solvents than any automotive paste carnauba that I’ve ever used. Spit shining solves the solvent problem.



Some of you learned how to spit shine boots/shoes, but for the others I’ll briefly describe how a G.I. spit shines his boots. You need a pair of boots, a can of Kiwi, a bag of cotton balls, and some water. Wet the cotton ball and squeeze out most of the water. Get a very small amount of wax on the cotton ball and wipe it onto the boot - continue wiping until there is no more smudging. Add a little more wax an repeat. Remoisten the cotton ball as needed so that it leaves tiny beads of water on the boots. When the cotton ball retains too much wax, then use a new cotton ball. It takes several layers (maybe 6 to 10 or more) to achieve that mirror shine. It’s obvious that the wax builds layers because enough flexing of the leather will cause the wax to flake.



Many months ago there was a lot of discussion about whether or not it is possible to layer carnauba on a car. I knew from experience that you could do it on shoes, so I started experimenting on my car. I quickly found out that using the normal wax application technique didn’t work - the new wax just softened and smeared the old wax. Then I tried using very thin layers of carnauba and waiting a day between layers, and this gave decent results. Next I tried using a spit shining technique on a small area of bare Zaino. This gave excellent results, but was very tedious.



A year ago I made a post on Autopia about this technique. Since then I’ve been playing with different methods in an attempt to make the process at least a little less tedious, and here is what I’m doing now.



Supplies needed: a low solvent paste carnauba such as Souverän or S-100/P21S; a 4� square of microfiber; a spray bottle that puts out a fine mist - not large drops; distilled water; a couple of MF towels. Keep the spray bottle/water in the refrigerator (thanks Brian-4DSC).



Method: Dampen the MF square and load it with just enough wax to thinly cover a small area - 1/4 hood or 1/2 door. Wipe it onto the work area and continue wiping until most of the wax disappears. Mist lightly as needed to keep a few water droplets on the surface. Move to the next work area and repeat. Now to the third work area. For the fourth step go back and redo the first area. Next do area four, then two, then five, then three, then six, etc. After you do the final area you’ll have a car with a lot of spots of hazed wax - but not to worry. Lightly mist an area with the cold water - 1/2 hood or door - and lightly buff with a MF towel. Turn the towel frequently. When the towel becomes damp switch to a new towel. After 24 hours you can repeat the procedure, and each time it increases the depth of the shine.



I don’t have an objective method of measuring the hardness of the spit shined carnauba, but subjectively - - bug removal is very nearly as easy as it is with only Zaino on the front of the car.



This is not a method for those of you who wash your car once a week and wax once a month, but it is great if you QD every day and seldom wash the car. I have had the best results with Pinnacle Crystal Mist QD which I keep in the refrigerator.



As always, YMMV!
 
dcswd - - -



Your guess is as good as mine! I was a teenage recruit when I was taught how to spit shine boots, and a semi-senile old man when Brian told me about the cold water - - - and during the intervening fifty plus years I’ve never stopped to consider how the process works.
 
Nick- Just wanted to give you a :xyxthumbs for this info.



I wonder how many people even spit-shine their footwear these days...properly shined shoes seem few and far between. I learned it from an old shoe-shine guy (who learned in the service), and now I'm learning how to do it on cars from you :D
 
Others on this board have suggested using a slightly damp MF followed by a dry MF to remove Klasse SG. I'm grateful to the inventor of that "two-towel" method because it works just great! It renders the task of removing SG a joy instead of a headache.



I'm wondering if the two-towel method qualifies as a kind of spit-shine? I was also wondering if the damp MF removes a great deal of the SG, diminishing the durability.
 
I've never seen that Pink wax before. I'm in the process of ordering detailing supplies so I might have to add that to my list of products to get to try.



Of course... I've spin shined enough shoes I'm not sure I want to start on vehicles... And I've gotten some pretty thick coats of shoe polish on shoes before. Sometimes when I got a knick or scratch in my layers of polish and didn't want to lose all the layers I built up I'd just keep adding layers untill I filled it in... Man, I was insane...
 
The big brown truck delivered my can of Pink Carnauba Paste Wax from BKB Automotive Cosmetics a few hours ago. I’ve been playing with it on my Chili Red MINI Cooper and so far it looks to be promising. I’ll post more tomorrow after I get more play time under my belt.



Thanks for the heads-up David!
 
Buick_guy said:
What the heck is spit shining? I've never heard of it!!! And whats all this about polishing your shoes?:S

Spit shining is the technique that is used to make shoes shine like mirrors - - and some of those tricks can be applied to putting carnauba on your car's paint.
 
My grandfather sold shoes for more years than the ages of everyone in this post combined! I sure know how to polish a shoe - spit shine and all! I remember having to stand before him as a kid every time I got a new pair. Even in his old age, he would bend down and examine the fit and either give a thumbs up or thumbs down. Geez, I haven't thought about that in years!



Many times with my carnauba application I spritz my applicator with Eagle One Wet n Shine and do two light coats, allowing the first coat to just about haze up before I apply the second coat, one section at a time. On removal I spritz the EO on the surface and buff off with a MF. If I am using Souveran, I use the PCM QD. This is my personal "spit shine" method.
 
Buick_guy said:
What the heck is spit shining? I've never heard of it!!! And whats all this about polishing your shoes?:S



It's how guys in the military get that mirror like finish on their shoe... Man, that's some fun work right there :rolleyes:
 
During my army days I wasa lways proud of the sucessful spitshing I accomplished on not only my low quaters and booots but also the bill on my dress uniform hat.

However, this spit shine always faded in less than a day when exposed to mid supper sun and heat in Fort Knox,KY.

So before I'd devote hours and hours doing this to a full car I'd definately do a duration test of one patch.

One last thougth on spit shining, a n old trick was to wite a feshly polished shoe with a five day deodorant pad. It achieven the very same results as hours with a cotton ball and Kiwi.

Prehaps the pink wax +5 day migh be a short cut. Who would dare to say it stank ?
 
I’ve posted my review of Pink Carnauba Wax here.



CHScholl - - - I served for 20 years, at times in some pretty hot climates, and never had a problem with the shine fading due to the heat.
 
Food for thought!



I think many carnauba manufacturers specify not to use h2o in conjunction in the wax application due to carnaubas allergy to water. Maybe i'm explaining it wrong. QD may be a different story.



Any add ons to this.



rd
 
Hmm, this is very interesting... Now that I have another car to drive, I can do more weird stuff on the Aurora. I'll have to give something like this a try (though it's such a big car). Your review of Pink wax was interesting, especially the part about the mirror test, very inventive. :)



I don't know that I'll go buy another tin of wax just to try spit-shining my car, but I think I might give your technique a try with some #16. :xyxthumbs
 
Quote: My grandfather sold shoes for more years than the ages of everyone in this post combined!



~One man’s opinion / observations ~



Spilchy not quite so sure of the validity of your claim with this post though. LOL



Spit-shine shoes (as I remember, and its been a long, long time, we used to heat the shoe polish before applying it) newspaper and vinegar to clean glass and coke to clean chrome, feels like I’m a kid again….



~Hope this helps~



Experience unshared; is knowledge wasted…/ Jon

justadumbarchitect *so I question everything*
 
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