• If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below.

Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

1976 Eldorado Paint Help

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • 1976 Eldorado Paint Help

    I have a 1976 Eldorado I've been restoring. Everything mechanical is up to date and the car did Route 66 from Chicago to LA (more than 2000 miles along the way) so now, it is down to the detailing.

    The paint is original Greenbrier Firemist Metallic, with metal flake in the paint. It looks pretty good for a car that is 44 years old but I wanted to really give it the goods and make it sparkle. Mostly, the hood area needs attention. It will wax OK but it looks kinda dull. I wrote the Meguiar's customer care folks and two people answered me. They said to use Ultimate Compound, followed by Ultimate Polishing, followed by Show Glaze 7 and Ultimate Wax. Standard prescription for paint correction, I suppose, but it sounded pretty aggressive to me for paint that old with an unknown depth. Who knows what it has seen in the past four decades?

    I found a long article by a Mike Phillips that used Show Glaze 7 as a rubbing compound, with multiple passes at the paint. That seemed more careful that going to town with cutting compounds and such. I also saw another article where instead of microfiber, a terry cloth washcloth was used as a bit more aggressive than a microfiber cloth but still using only Show Glaze 7 as a medium. Any thoughts from the experts here?

    Also, Meguiar's customer service claims that there is no benefit to letting Show Glaze 7 soak in, as the article by Mike Phillips recommends. Any thoughts there?

    I'm not a professional, just a guy who wants his baby to look her best. Any guidance would be appreciated.

    My basic plan - 1) Meguiar's Waterless Wash and Wax 2) Clay bar, using Quick Detail as a lube 3) Multiple passes with the Show Glaze 7 and getting my back into some rubbing 4) Ultimate Wax.

  • #2
    Re: 1976 Eldorado Paint Help

    Lots of views but no replies. Well, it is a bit out of the ordinary. Thanks for all those who read the post. I'll try a different site. Dealing with single stage metal flake paint from 44 years ago is pretty specialized. Take care!!

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: 1976 Eldorado Paint Help

      Follow the method Mike Phillips describes and you will be just fine.

      99 Grand Prix
      02 Camaro SS

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: 1976 Eldorado Paint Help

        Either approach you have laid out sounds like a good plan. Compounds have been used for decades to remove oxidation as a first step. Ultimate Compound applied by hand overall is not what we consider that aggressive. The Mike Phillips #7 Show Car Glaze technique is becoming popular also.
        Nick Winn
        Product & Training Specialist | Meguiar's Online Forum Administrator
        Meguiar's Inc.
        Irvine, CA
        nawinn@meguiars.com

        Comment


        • #5
          Re: 1976 Eldorado Paint Help

          I've done a few single stage lacquer restorations using Mike's M07 method and highly recommend it. The El Camino in my avatar was my first and it brought the burgundy paint back well enough to get me a few local show trophies. Once you're done with the M07 rubs and soaks, evaluating the paint at that point will decide what compound / polish /pad to use. My favorite was always M80 by machine, varying the pad with the degree of correction needed, but it's no longer available. Ultimate polish works if the oxidation is mild. Ultimate Compound is good too, but be careful of any thin paint on peaks or ridges.


          Bill

          Comment

          Working...
          X
          gtag('config', 'UA-161993-8');