Cheap machine polish.
Discussion
Chaps.
My car is a milano red Honda and the paint has seen better days - all swirls and blemishes. I have it in at a local body shop next week to get a damaged bumper and wheel arch trim repaired. I enquired about machine polishing and they say they do it for £150.
I had looked at premium detailers and paint correction seemed to start at £300 ish all the way up to £800+. Is a £150 machine polish at a body shop worthwhile, or is a once over with a machine not going to do much at all for my paint?
Just want a lot of the swirls buffed out really.
Cheers
My car is a milano red Honda and the paint has seen better days - all swirls and blemishes. I have it in at a local body shop next week to get a damaged bumper and wheel arch trim repaired. I enquired about machine polishing and they say they do it for £150.
I had looked at premium detailers and paint correction seemed to start at £300 ish all the way up to £800+. Is a £150 machine polish at a body shop worthwhile, or is a once over with a machine not going to do much at all for my paint?
Just want a lot of the swirls buffed out really.
Cheers
at that price (and time, materials etc) your going to be exchanging swirls for holograms, marring etc
I personally wouldn't bother as more damage can be done.
paint correction is a tedious and long winded process involving lots and lots of different consumables (if done properly), hence the high price.
I personally wouldn't bother as more damage can be done.
paint correction is a tedious and long winded process involving lots and lots of different consumables (if done properly), hence the high price.
As above, you'll be replacing the swirls with buffer trails, holograms and probably new swirls.
It may appear acceptable if/when you first pick it up but that'll be the flller's left behind by the old school compounds/polishes that most bodyshops use.....give it a couple of weeks of rain and a wash or two and the true picture will be revealed.
Honda's typically have soft clearcoat so defect removal is relatively easy, a detailer will still take his/her time in the refining stage to ensure the end result is acceptable - free from the machine inflicted defects mentioned above.
cheers
Chris
It may appear acceptable if/when you first pick it up but that'll be the flller's left behind by the old school compounds/polishes that most bodyshops use.....give it a couple of weeks of rain and a wash or two and the true picture will be revealed.
Honda's typically have soft clearcoat so defect removal is relatively easy, a detailer will still take his/her time in the refining stage to ensure the end result is acceptable - free from the machine inflicted defects mentioned above.
cheers
Chris
For correction short of painting, try the following:-
Wash. Dry. Remove Road tar with copious amounts of tar remover. Go over all bodywork with a clay bar and lubricant (water usually works for me in a garden spray bottle). Then apply T-cut polish very carefully, panel by panel. T-cut must not be left on for long and must not be applied too heavily. Then use a polish system. Everyone will have their own view on this, but I would either use Meguiars three stage system, Turtle Wax followed by a top sealer, or good old Simoniz, followed by a top sealer. There is nothing but nothing like a good coat of top quality wax.
That is a lot of elbow grease but it is not a huge car, and if that did not make your swirls and scratches vanish I would be astounded. Your car will also stay clean for longer but should be washed gently with warm water before applying a further coat of wax, in due course.
The pros can no doubt do a much more professional job, but I assume this would be at serious cost.
Wash. Dry. Remove Road tar with copious amounts of tar remover. Go over all bodywork with a clay bar and lubricant (water usually works for me in a garden spray bottle). Then apply T-cut polish very carefully, panel by panel. T-cut must not be left on for long and must not be applied too heavily. Then use a polish system. Everyone will have their own view on this, but I would either use Meguiars three stage system, Turtle Wax followed by a top sealer, or good old Simoniz, followed by a top sealer. There is nothing but nothing like a good coat of top quality wax.
That is a lot of elbow grease but it is not a huge car, and if that did not make your swirls and scratches vanish I would be astounded. Your car will also stay clean for longer but should be washed gently with warm water before applying a further coat of wax, in due course.
The pros can no doubt do a much more professional job, but I assume this would be at serious cost.
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