Well, I have a few waterspots on the hood and I'm pretty sure I can get those all out myself as I've dealt with that in the past. Although any suggestions are appreciated.
My problem is that the front half of the car was repainted due to an ******* deciding to damage another person's property. Anyway, before it was painted the car had to sit outside on and off for a week or two without any type of protection on it from the FL sun and unfortunately I was having knee surgery and unable to avoid this. Once I got the car back from paint and finally got to wash it, I noticed that my 10 year old paint on the rear half of my car had suddenly gotten a very light amount of oxidation on it. I clayed the car hoping for a miracle but to no avail. So I need to find out the best way to handle this and get that paint back to being as smooth and shiny as it used to be. It kills me to have silky smooth paint up front and to touch the rear half with a cotton towel and hear it go SHHHHH.
Please help
My problem is that the front half of the car was repainted due to an ******* deciding to damage another person's property. Anyway, before it was painted the car had to sit outside on and off for a week or two without any type of protection on it from the FL sun and unfortunately I was having knee surgery and unable to avoid this. Once I got the car back from paint and finally got to wash it, I noticed that my 10 year old paint on the rear half of my car had suddenly gotten a very light amount of oxidation on it. I clayed the car hoping for a miracle but to no avail. So I need to find out the best way to handle this and get that paint back to being as smooth and shiny as it used to be. It kills me to have silky smooth paint up front and to touch the rear half with a cotton towel and hear it go SHHHHH.
Please help