Spit-shining with QD/M#16/Cyclo

Accumulator

Well-known member
Disclaimer: this is *awfully* subjective and I didn't do a "control" panel the "regular" way. So this is all a matter of personal perception.



Yesterday I washed Accumulatorette's A8 following a long road trip. Lots of bugs and tar, so I did a lot of spot-claying. It didn't seem to strip an appreciable amount of the (two week old) #16, but I decided to redo it anyhow. She hasn't been too thrilled with how the #16 looks on it, preferring the look of 3M Showcar Paste. I did not tell her I was gonna rewax the car, I said I was just doing a quick wash and clay.



I did the tight spots (around door handles, the bottom of the bumper covers near the black trim, etc.) by hand the regular way, no spit-shining.



To apply the #16 on the rest of the car, I put the (white Cyclo brand) finishing pads on the machine and turned it on briefly before shutting it off. As the heads started to slow down, I stuck one head in the can of #16. I scraped the excess wax off the pad with a plastic razorblade and then did the same with the pad on the Cyclo's other head. Warning: you might oughta be experienced with the Cyclo before you try this ;)



Before putting the Cyclo on the car, I first lightly misted the surface with Griot's Speed Shine (hey, it's blue like the #16 :D ), which contains carnauba. Then I put the Cyclo on the panel, turned it on, and worked the #16 until I had a *very* thin coat on the area I was working. The Speed Shine dissipated as I did this, with minimal slinging. I did a panel, then reapplied #16 to the pads and did another panel. Then I took it off the first one by hand using a CBT, fogging the surfacxe with my breath per usual. I repeated this until I'd done the whole car.



I noticed that the spit-shined areas buffed up a bit easier than the ones I'd done by hand the regular way. I can't say I noticed a huge difference in appearance between the two since the regular-method areas were rather not only small but also were not areas that really showed off any subtle differences. I *did* think the car looked a whole lot better than Audi silver ever did with #16 in the past, and I've used it a lot. Since I hadn't redone the prep, the only thing I could attribute the improvement to was the method of applying the #16.



Other notes: there was virtually *no* leftover product on/in the Cyclo pads when I cleaned them up. There's usually a bit of excess #16 that I have to squeeze out while washing them, but not this time. The two CBTs I'd used still seemed clean, not loaded up at all, no evidence of having been used to remove the "heavy wax" from a fairly large sedan (I could've got by with just one). This was also different from my usual experience.



A few hours later my wife went into the garage and saw the car, and she immediately said "wow, what did you redo it with? That's really something!" And, heh heh, she doesn't make a big fuss over her car simply looking great- she really did notice a marked improvement in its appearance compared to how it looked the last time I applied #16 to it. I told her what I did, and she was stunned; she had assumed that I'd redone the car with completely different products. She has reconsidered her opinion of the #16 based on the difference that she perceived; now she likes how it looks (after years of seeing it on silver cars).



As I said, very subjective and it might've just been a fluke. But I'd be curious as to how this method works for anybody else who'd care to try it.
 
How long did that process take you to do the entire car? Sounds like a very time consuming process.... not sure I'd have the paitence to go over the entire car like that.
 
Accumulator,





Thank you again for all of your valuable tips and info. They are definitely worth their weight in platinum :D :up





Glad I came across before I started using carnauba on my vehicles again. So, spray a spray wax on first then apply the paste. Do you think any spray wax/carnauba enriched QD will do?





I'm alwys excited about trying out new tip! :bounce
 
Accumulator....Your process sounds like a winner....I enjoy working with my Cyclo and with #16...I'll try it when I can get some time to work on my car. A little off topic but.....Go Browns!.....I'm sure happy to see that the Browns beat the Ravens! Looks like the the team got a solid leader at QB in Garcia. By the stats, he spread the wealth with his entire receiving squad......The Ravens had the #1 rated defense in the NFL.:sosad
 
For this technique would a spray wax type product : Stoner Speed Bead, Megs Quik Wax, etc or a QD with carnauba in it or just a pure QD work just as well?
 
I see some of this thread got lost in the crash...hope nobody's missing anything.



UPDATE: the A8 got rained on for the first time since the spit-shining. My wife was initially concerned because the beads were, as she put it, "much larger than usual" for a freshly waxed car. But by the time she got home they weren't too big and she said they were now a lot smaller than when she'd first observed them. Still a bit bigger than I would've expected but none of them were bigger than a pencil eraser and most were much smaller than that. But *I think* they were shaped differently too; they seemed more spherical than usual, like little balls of water with barely flattened bottoms. It was easy to blow them around the panels with my breath.



I have no idea what, if anything, this signifies :nixweiss And to be honest, I haven't been looking at water beads this closely for a very long time so maybe what I'm reporting isn't anything unusual or truly different from the norm. Don'cha just love the totally subjective, unscientific nature of this thread :o



Next time I'll have to do a panel the "regular" way for a control.



Of course, if somebody *else* tried this we might get a useful opinion (hint hint :D ).
 
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