Street Dreams: Maserati MC12 135 pics + Videos

edgewise

New member
One thing I've noticed over the years is that polymer waxes tend to not 'haze' like carnauba based waxes. Seems that you have to buff alittle more on the carnauba based, anyone agree with this?
 
When I first started waxing my vehicles, I used either Blitz or Zymol Japon. Maybe it was my being new to detailing, but there was much more haze present in those products than compared to the Klasse I use now.



Klasse barely hazes on my car and removal is a snap. It's so simple that I add another layer of SG each time I wash the car.



Now that I think about it, perhaps it is because the polymer waxes require much less product than compared to carnuba?



-ema
 
Actually most of us tend to agree that buffing out carnauba waxes is a bit easier than Klasse. Some will even argue that Klasse is a pain in the butt to buff out. The Pinnacle waxes, P21 and Blitz are so easy to buff out. Real easy! Blitz can even be left on for hours and its a breeze to buff out. You should never allow Klasse or Zaino to remain on the car 5 or 6 hours. Removing it will be such a pain, particularly the Klasse. Laters.
 
i still have a hard time just throwing out the carnuba waxes. i think they still offer a look that most polymers can't. plus i think there is something therapeutic about applying a wax, just me i guess. that being said, polymers certainly have a big edge over waxes as far as reflective qualities and durability. ahhh so many waxes/polymers and so few cars:D
 
I currently use my unwanted waxes (like Zymol cleaner wax) on things like my marble coffee table. It's got something that looks like a clearcoat on it! Also, my aquarium, which is made out of acrylic.
 
the first time i used klasse on the stove my wife said that it stunk and she didin't like it, but then i caught here cleaning it with klasse and using a microfiber towel. we are trend setters in many ways.:p
 
I use my left over carnuba waxes on the wood coffe table. Shines better than pledge but watch when you toss the magazine on it it flies off the other side.
 
A little while back I had the opportunity to work on this very rare and beautiful car. Over several days a full paint correction, engine and interior detail were carried out.

No need to post every performance figure of the MC12, we all know what it can do. This car is 7 feet wide and nearly 17 feet long, in person the its massive! Its built on the Ferarri Enzo chassis... the Enzo accelerates quicker, stops shorter and has a higher top speed BUT the MC12 is still faster around the Nurburgring because its body creates so much downforce and far less drag... thanks in part to the not so polisher friendly tail section :o

The car was produced only between 2004 and 2005, a total of 50 road going MC12s were made and only 45 were allowed to be sold, 5 were kept by Maserati.

(This one is in there somewhere)

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Onto the writeup...

Began with the wheels as usual, this car spent some time at the track so the wheels were dirtier than expected, P21s wheel gel was left to sit for a few minutes before agitating with various brushes.

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The wheel wells were degreased and the tires were cleaned twice, old silicone based tire dressing needed to be removed completely.

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The smaller EZ brush was a big help on the wheel wells and air inlets by the front wheels

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Rear before...

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And after...

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Onto washing the car with the 2 bucket method and microfiber mitts

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Next the entire car including glass and wheels were clayed with a fine grade bar using ONR as lube. After the car was dried with some DD waffle weave towels and the wheels and crevices were blown out with the electric blower.

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The between areas of the slits on the front nose had a lot of contamination, most likely from track driving.

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Small tar spots were found on the front nose and lower panels, some Tardis on a MF towel cleaned them up without issue.

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Onto the paint correction work. Cant ever say this car would look better in red because the roadcars only came in 1 color scheme, the white is called Bianco Fuji.

The finish was very hard ceramic paint. After inspection under the Halogen and LED lights and a few test spots I landed on a process that would yield as close to 100% correction as possible, the biggest problem areas was the massive wing section which had lots of RIDS, buffer trails and hazing.

A total of 4 correction steps were needed to finish down the entire wing section

Before...

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After first 2 steps all the RIDS were remove

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After the final 2 steps

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Same issues on the opposite side...



Laid down a bead and began with the rotary using a foam cutting pad, then foam polishing pads and ended with a finishing pad

Polishing stage 1500rpm

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Fully broken down, nice translucent ribbon effect :hippie:

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Under the LED

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Reflection shot

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Moved onto the top part of the tail, saw some pigtail sand scratches here and just beneath them was a rather large rock chip.. again the byproduct of track driving

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Some LED shots of the clusters on the side curve of the tail

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Correcting pigtailing took a some higher RPM and several passes with a cutting pad

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Finished shots

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The bridge of the tail needed a bit more finesse in the correction process, because of its carbon fiber construction the top part of the tail will bend under heavier pressure, so I opted to take a few more passes with reduced pressure and slower passes to achieve the same level of correction, this took quite a while but had to be handled.

Working out a bit of compounding haze

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50/50

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Right side before correction...

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Left side after...

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Video #1 50/50 of tail section correction



Ceiling halide lights showed the difference in clarity between the corrected top tail and uncorrected lower portion, light refraction everywhere on the lower part untouched by the polisher and the top part with zero light refraction after polishing

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Once everything was finished down the finish on the tail shown under camera flash and fenix LED light

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Getting underneath the top ection of the tail was a paint. I switched from the metabo to the flex 3403 rotary without the bale handle using a 3" pad

Before

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After

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Opposite side under tail

before

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after

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Some various correction shots and jeweling

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//Video #2: Jeweling video using rotary

Demonstrates part of the jeweling process



Clarity after jeweling... picking up defects with the camera on the metallic white wasnt happening, the difference in gloss after correction however was very noticeable. The white portions of the car were corrected using a 3 step process, the finish was near perfect after the second step but further leveling and refining it amped up the clairty and was well worth the extra hours in my opinion.

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Then came the correction of the front headlights, no covers on them, just exposed paint

Before shots

Slight pig-tailing here as well

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After

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Passenger side had it slightly worse

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The headlights recived similar process as seen on the tail, after jeweling and an IPA heres what they looked like the next morning when I finished

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That concluded the paint correction part of the detail. Moving on it was time to polish the wheels.

Started with mild cleaner polish on a soft pad, than applied an acrylic glaze and finished up with 1 coat of Rejex for durability which was later topped with Werkstat acrylic which just looks awesome on silver

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Tires were dressed for a deep matte finish, no high shine because quite frankly it makes me cringe when I see it on luxury autos

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Some tar spots on the wheel well inlay were cleaned with with a few hits of Tardis

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Wheels polished and sealed

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Understated detail on the wheel... M

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Now onto the heart surgery... this was not an easy engine to work on. With the help of the owner together we unlatched and lifted the engine cover and locked it in place so I could begin cleaning

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Theres no simple way to get in there so I simply laid down a MF towel and went to work carefully

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A biodegradable apc cut with water was used to wipe down all engine and suspension components, all that could be physically reached was cleaned.

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Just a fantastic site to see the block buried beneath the rear wishbone suspension... The MC12 has independent wishbone suspension front and rear with anti-dive and anti-squat geometries... and push-rod suspension.

620hp worth

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With the help of some compressed can air I dried up any left over water and wiped down all the painted components with JW acrylic jett.

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Dressed 50/50

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Finished

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Exhaust tips were partly caged by mesh so a little improvisation was needed

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After polishing I put a quick coat of jetseal on them for protection

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To get better lighting in the interior I removed the roof, carbon fiber makes everybody feel strong :thumb:

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Roof carefully placed aside... never on the ground

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Black wow on the roof seals

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All interior carbon was treated with jetseal for some added gloss, seats cleaned and conditioned etc. No fast food coke cups and loose jellybeans in this one, didnt take very long to sort out the interior.

The interior is almost identical to the Enzo, just with blue leather instead of red... the owner however said the driving posistion of the MC12 is much more relaxed than the enzo and easier to drive at the limit because the steering wheel sits lower. I'd say that is pretty unbiased opinion as he owns both cars :giggle:

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The inside glass was treated normally. The exterior glass was treated with my Japanese window polymer, I only use this on select cars as the application takes a long time but once its on the beading doesnt stop, im going on 7 months with 1 application for my car. Im working on getting about 20 bottles here to sell but it may not happen as they come in small quantities and I never know when.

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After each correction stage the finish was given an IPA wipedown, and then just before applying the protection once more to ensure a clean finish.
 
Over the course of 2 days a total over 4 coats of sealant were applied. Applying 4 coats in 1 day isnt ideal, I like to let each coat cure for as long as possible so the first two sat overnight (1 applied and buffed off the second applied and left to cure) and the last two were applied the following day in a similar fashion.

All done by DA machine with a gold lc pad speeds 4-5

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Finished product after several days of odd hour working.. I had other cars to handle at times.

The final day I worked from 8am-midnight

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The owner calls it the Giant Penis.... not hard to see why

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This is one of the natural lighting pictures, simply left the garage door open and turned my halogens off.

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Some of my favorite shots....

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Video #3: Walkaround in the garage



I was walking back to my car loading up my gear when I looked back and saw this shot... almost out of a movie I thought

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As for the detailing portion that was it. The MC12 went on display at a charity car event about 1 week later which I got to be apart of. The owner took the MC12 and a few other cars to the show, many of which I had the pleasure of driving as well as detailing.

Lining up around 6am....

The bloodline conga train, :applause2:

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MC12 and friends

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I was happy to snap some shots of the car outside at the show .... I really wanted to see how the finish looked outside of a dark garage

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#4 A final walkaround video



Thank you for taking the time to read the process and view the pictures, I have been a little lazy recently with writeups so I tried to make this one as full as possible.
 
Amazing car. Awesome detail. Artistic write up.

Love your attention and patience. Thanks for taking the time (probably a lot...I know) to post this up.

Do more if you have them!
 
Great job David! What an honor to be chosen for this detail. I've never seen one of those cars. I can't even imagine what that would do on the track! Excellent work as usual!:Dancing Dot::biggrin::biggrin::biggrin:
 
A car with some :devil: ATTITUDE:devil:

Excellent write up and pics David... and, as usual, GREAT work!:clap:
The owner's collection is in the right hands.:thumbup::thumbup:
 
Truly inspirational work. Posts from you, Todd, Clark, Nick C., Ryan B. etc. all give me goosebumps! Love 'em.

Listen to the acoustics in this guy's garage.

I also love center lock hubs. I swear you could equip a Honda Civic with those things and I'd love it!
 
David,
Your work never fails to blow me away! This one just might be the best yet. That was an amazing job on one of the sweetest cars I have ever seen. Also, thank you for the excelent write up.

I know this detail took a long time and you busted your tail, but man you are one lucky dude to get to drive some of these cars as well.

Keep up the awesome work:notworthy:
 
Completely and totally amazing

:clap: :notworthy: :clap: :notworthy: :clap: :notworthy: :clap: :notworthy:
:notworthy: :clap: :notworthy: :clap: :notworthy: :clap: :notworthy::clap:
:clap: :notworthy: :clap: :notworthy: :clap: :notworthy: :clap: :notworthy:
:notworthy: :clap: :notworthy: :clap: :notworthy: :clap: :notworthy::clap:
:clap: :notworthy: :clap: :notworthy: :clap: :notworthy: :clap: :notworthy:
:notworthy: :clap: :notworthy: :clap: :notworthy: :clap: :notworthy::clap:


I think that sums this one up well. AWESOME!!!
 
Amazing work on an incredible car. Thanks for continuing to take the time to share your work and expertise :notworthy: :notworthy:
 
:clap: :notworthy: :clap: :notworthy: :clap: :notworthy: :clap: :notworthy:
:notworthy: :clap: :notworthy: :clap: :notworthy: :clap: :notworthy::clap:
:clap: :notworthy: :clap: :notworthy: :clap: :notworthy: :clap: :notworthy:
:notworthy: :clap: :notworthy: :clap: :notworthy: :clap: :notworthy::clap:
:clap: :notworthy: :clap: :notworthy: :clap: :notworthy: :clap: :notworthy:
:notworthy: :clap: :notworthy: :clap: :notworthy: :clap: :notworthy::clap:


I think that sums this one up well. AWESOME!!!

^ x2 :)

Great job David. Not only is your work top-notch,your write-ups are equally impressive :wizard:
 
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