This is a flat Black Audi A3 corrected by myself and Tony from Cherished Car Care.

R1KK1 BFG

New member
Owning a flat colour, especially black, can be tough but rewarding. Today's correction detail was on a flat black Audi A3 that was in dire need of help and improvement. The owner wanted the right finish as a base to enjoy looking after and maintaining.



This was no easy task, plenty of scratching and marring of all kinds.



The flat black finish proved a difficult challenge, with a long period of testing to finally get the best pad/polish combination. It was a long day, but we got there eventually.



Today's correction and polishing was carried out using a Clarke rotary polisher, Makita rotary polisher and various compounds and polishes by 3M, Autosmart and Menzerna.



We also used -



Autosmart grey detailing clay

AutoRae-Chem Bright Wheels wheel cleaner

Collinite wax

AS Glass Clear

Megs Detail spray

AS Autowash

And various brushes and microfibre cloths etc.













The car on arrival -









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Some of the scratching, marring, swirl and bird etching...









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Pictures from the days work, with some before/after views and then the finished work.











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Thanks for reading.
 
Looks like "Flat Black" to me.



I think boostwagon is confusing "Matte Black" with "Flat Black", which we use interchangeably here in the states.



Great job on the detail, the car looks 100x better.
 
Tony@Cherished said:
Why ?

Over here, a black that has no flake/metalic is usually called " flat "



Flat black on this side of the pond is a frequent term for matte black. Buy a can of "flat black" spray paint and matte is what you'll get. I jumped on this thread wondering what the heck you were going to do to detail what I consider "flat" (ie, matte) black? :har:



Nice work just the same!



TL
 
Flat black in the American body shop world means flat, no gloss. There is flat, semi-gloss, and gloss. I thought I was going to see a matte black car too, and was wondering how you would do any correction on a matte black car (normally they are single stage paint).
 
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