KYDetailin
New member
First of all, let me say hello, as I'm brand new to this forum. I'm active on the Tex detailing forum and on a local site as well.
Now that I have that out of the way, here's the deal. I just got a job today to work on a Harlequin. :woohoo:
I'm pretty excited about it! The paint is oxidized, but not terribly. It's swirled, but not terribly. The guy had a friend work on it once with a rotary and he went through the paint. Now there is a white mark on the passenger side door.
He is going to H2O and wants me to get his car looking nice. I know I can't fix the rotary mistake. He knows this too.
I just want to know how best to approach working on single stage paint?
Here's what I have at my disposal:
PC 7424
LC CCS pads: orange, white, gray.
Meg's light cutting pad and yellow polishing pad
Optimum Compound
Optimum Polish
Optimum Poli-Seal
Meg's #21
Duragloss
Those are the main things for paint. How can I best approach this while avoiding messing up the paint? Thanks for any tips!
Now that I have that out of the way, here's the deal. I just got a job today to work on a Harlequin. :woohoo:
I'm pretty excited about it! The paint is oxidized, but not terribly. It's swirled, but not terribly. The guy had a friend work on it once with a rotary and he went through the paint. Now there is a white mark on the passenger side door.
He is going to H2O and wants me to get his car looking nice. I know I can't fix the rotary mistake. He knows this too.
I just want to know how best to approach working on single stage paint?
Here's what I have at my disposal:
PC 7424
LC CCS pads: orange, white, gray.
Meg's light cutting pad and yellow polishing pad
Optimum Compound
Optimum Polish
Optimum Poli-Seal
Meg's #21
Duragloss
Those are the main things for paint. How can I best approach this while avoiding messing up the paint? Thanks for any tips!