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Clay bar and polishing

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  • Clay bar and polishing

    Hey guy's in the coming day's I wan't to clay bar my wifes PT cruiser it is electric blue in colour,now after doing the initial work with the clay bay what polishes do you recomend to follow after that to give it that deep wet look.

    Regards Tony.

  • #2
    Re: Clay bar and polishing

    Depending on the condition of the paint and what your ultimate goal is you can just do ultimate polish the ultimate wax or NXT 2.0. If the paint has lots if heavy swirls and defects then ultimate compound followed by ultimate polish the your wax.
    Rupes 21 / Flex 3401 / G110v2 / GG3"
    Thoryamaha919 AKA Evan
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    • #3
      Re: Clay bar and polishing

      Thanks Evan,just another question I was also thinking that after the ultimate wax then going over it with show car glaze and a wax to finish it off and lock it all in anyone have any thoughts on that.

      Regards Tony.

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      • #4
        Re: Clay bar and polishing

        are you doing this by hand?
        It has swirls and paint defects, all cars do.
        at a minimum polish it, with a DA.
        Compound if you want to get rid of the deeper paint defects.
        Id try a cleaner wax, the new White Wax is a great cleaner wax. I've had great results with it.
        and yes you can use it on any color.

        DetailingByM.com

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        • #5
          Re: Clay bar and polishing

          If you are doing this all by hand I highly recommend to work on one section at a time. If you used a DA, you should be able able to complete the task in a day.

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          • #6
            Re: Clay bar and polishing

            Tony, make sure you get the order of things right: wash/clean, clay, compound, polish, wax. Claying and compounding will take the longest time and need the most attention, because the claying is all by hand and the compound tends to be sticky and hard to get off. The whole job will take an entire day and night, multiple afternoons, or whatever it takes, so don't expect this to be knocked out in two hours. If you do it all by hand, you're likely to give up in the middle.

            If you want the deep wet look, then after you clay, I recommend Ultimate Compound, then Ultimate Polish, and then Gold Class Wax. That gives you a professional show car look. You then maintain the wax/finish for as long as needed over the coming months with Gold Class Quik Detailer and Quik Wax (in this case, to keep that deep wet look) until you can do this process (called a "correction") all over again.
            Non-Garaged Daily Driver, DAMF System + M101, Carnauba Finish Enthusiast
            4-Step | Zen Detailing | Undercarriage | DAMF Upgrade |
            First Correction | Gallery

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            • #7
              Re: Clay bar and polishing

              Thankyou for all the advice guy's I appreciate it.

              Regards Tony.

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              • #8
                Is clay really necessary though if your using a compound with a cutting pad anyway? The compound with an aggressive pad is going to remove far deeper than what a clay will wipe off, correct? If you plan on following
                Wash
                Compound
                Polish
                Wax
                Then clay beaten wash and compound just seems like an unnecessary step?

                As a matter of fact...I've never used clay...if I've compounded a car once and I'm maintaining it regularly most cleaner/polishes seem to remove deep enough to make any well maintained surface continue to be well maintained. so, the only point of clay would be trying to save my clear coat some wear, and substituting clay for polishing step if all my car really needs is a wax anyway. Therefore simplifying the steps to:
                Wash
                Clay
                Wax?
                Again assuming the car has been maintained well.
                I'm just trying to understand WHY CLAY? Compound and most polishes will remove more than clay ever will?...my mind is now open, so beat me with some learnin' :-)

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                • #9
                  Re: Clay bar and polishing

                  What clay does is to remove little pieces of 'stuff' that is stuck to the surface (which just washing doesn't remove). If you only compound/polish, there is a good chance of these little 'pieces' getting stuck to the pad...which in turn will scratch the surface.

                  When in doubt, clay.

                  Make sense?

                  Bill

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                  • #10
                    Pretty simple answer. Makes sense. Thanks!

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                    • #11
                      I've attempted to skip clay and go for ultimate compound and the results are immediately disheartening as soon as you rub the back of your hand over the part. It will not give that pure smooth feel that starting out with clay will give you. You can clay fairly quickly and it's not something that wears you out. Your lightly gliding on lubricant, back and forth on the panel in circular motions. Then the UC will take you to that slick glassy feel that your looking for. Finish with UP and a sealant, allow it to cure overnight and final coat with a carnauba. I then do a final wipe with ultimate quick wax using a long knap mf and the paint is so amazingly slick and smooth that it blows your mind!

                      Clay is something that can not be stressed to much. It is the base that the other steps build off of. Skipping it tends to reduce the final product quality.

                      That's my opinion.
                      Doing the best I can with what I've got.

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                      • #12
                        Re: Clay bar and polishing

                        Originally posted by owendavidj View Post
                        Is clay really necessary though if your using a compound with a cutting pad anyway? The compound with an aggressive pad is going to remove far deeper than what a clay will wipe off, correct? If you plan on following
                        Wash
                        Compound
                        Polish
                        Wax
                        Then clay beaten wash and compound just seems like an unnecessary step?

                        As a matter of fact...I've never used clay...if I've compounded a car once and I'm maintaining it regularly most cleaner/polishes seem to remove deep enough to make any well maintained surface continue to be well maintained. so, the only point of clay would be trying to save my clear coat some wear, and substituting clay for polishing step if all my car really needs is a wax anyway. Therefore simplifying the steps to:
                        Wash
                        Clay
                        Wax?
                        Again assuming the car has been maintained well.
                        I'm just trying to understand WHY CLAY? Compound and most polishes will remove more than clay ever will?...my mind is now open, so beat me with some learnin' :-)
                        Just to help out a little bit and show how important this step is for a complete full polishing job and to get your paint the best it can be! And just to add often times a foam pad will glide over above surface contaminants and not abrade them, claying is the most effective method of removing above surface bonded contaminants, things like tree sap-rail dust-industrial fall out and every day road grime
                        How to clay bar a vehicle. Hosted by Mike Phillips of Meguiar's.For the clay bar used in this video go here: http://goo.gl/cHLwW6


                        Originally posted by Top Gear View Post
                        If you want the deep wet look, then after you clay, I recommend Ultimate Compound, then Ultimate Polish, and then Gold Class Wax. That gives you a professional show car look. You then maintain the wax/finish for as long as needed over the coming months with Gold Class Quik Detailer and Quik Wax (in this case, to keep that deep wet look) until you can do this process (called a "correction") all over again.
                        And If you don't mind me adding to your great answer Top Gear, something I learned years ago from mike Phillips is after the claying,compounding,polishing and the 2 thin coats of your LSP you could apply a thin coat of #7 show car glaze pure polish on top of all that to really make that paint really look dripping wet. A old secret the ol' show/cruise guys used to do for just that purpose. It will only last a week or so but will set your hard work apart from the next polished ride.
                        ''USE THE LEAST AGGRESSIVE PRODUCT TO GET THE JOB DONE RIGHT''
                        You Don't Know What You Can Do Until You Try '' TECHNIQUE IS EVERYTHING''
                        Test Hoods Are Cheap And Most Of The Time Free

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                        • #13
                          Stang, I don't think we are talking about a meticulously maintained paint. I'm under the impression that this is a first time go at paint correction for this vehicle and as such it will have a great deal of those embedded artifacts on all surfaces. Can you eventually grind through them with a compound? Most likely. But is the insane amount of time and energy necessary? Nope. In 15-30 minutes you can clay the entire car and then set out to doing the paint correction without putting extra effort into trying literally wear/grind away the embedded contamination. It's just easier to clay.

                          Think about why we clay today and didn't for the last 100 years. Before, clay wasn't out there. We would wet sand and buff. We would compound with a buffer. Then came clay and the job got easier, faster and with better results. Slowly, everyone caught on to the magic of clay and it went mainstream. Your refusal or reluctance to suggest it on a new paint correction says to me that you've not yet proven the technique and results to yourself. If you at some point need to work on an average Joes paint that gets a weekly wash and annual hand wax...... you'll Thank the Lord above for the clay you can buy at Walmart and every auto parts store in the country. It's that popular. You can now buy clay kits in every town across the country and not at specialty detail shops.

                          Your opinion is valid in that your car may be kept in pristine condition and clay may only offer your situation minimum added value. But when a customer or friend brings his 5 year car or truck over and wants to see what you can do..... You gran for that clay first!
                          Doing the best I can with what I've got.

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            Re: Clay bar and polishing

                            Originally posted by larry0071 View Post
                            Stang, I don't think we are talking about a meticulously maintained paint. I'm under the impression that this is a first time go at paint correction for this vehicle and as such it will have a great deal of those embedded artifacts on all surfaces. Can you eventually grind through them with a compound? Most likely. But is the insane amount of time and energy necessary? Nope. In 15-30 minutes you can clay the entire car and then set out to doing the paint correction without putting extra effort into trying literally wear/grind away the embedded contamination. It's just easier to clay.

                            Think about why we clay today and didn't for the last 100 years. Before, clay wasn't out there. We would wet sand and buff. We would compound with a buffer. Then came clay and the job got easier, faster and with better results. Slowly, everyone caught on to the magic of clay and it went mainstream. Your refusal or reluctance to suggest it on a new paint correction says to me that you've not yet proven the technique and results to yourself. If you at some point need to work on an average Joes paint that gets a weekly wash and annual hand wax...... you'll Thank the Lord above for the clay you can buy at Walmart and every auto parts store in the country. It's that popular. You can now buy clay kits in every town across the country and not at specialty detail shops.

                            Your opinion is valid in that your car may be kept in pristine condition and clay may only offer your situation minimum added value. But when a customer or friend brings his 5 year car or truck over and wants to see what you can do..... You gran for that clay first!
                            Larry buddy why are you telling me this, when I suggested in claying and posted up a link on how to clay? I think you need to reread this thread! your turned around!
                            ''USE THE LEAST AGGRESSIVE PRODUCT TO GET THE JOB DONE RIGHT''
                            You Don't Know What You Can Do Until You Try '' TECHNIQUE IS EVERYTHING''
                            Test Hoods Are Cheap And Most Of The Time Free

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              After re reading, I agree. I'm so far of on a tangent that is not relevant to the OP. Sorry. That's what happens when your drinking beer and up until 2am while on vacation from work. It appears that I forgot that he started the thread because he was going to clay and I felt I had to defend the merit of clay.

                              I'm awake and totally sober now. I'm sorry.
                              Doing the best I can with what I've got.

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