Alpine White e90 335i - Paint Correction

zmcgovern45

New member
This car belongs to a forum member who did some mechanical work for me a while back in exchange for a detail. This is the 4th 335i that has come to me from the forum, so they must be pretty popular. This car had the typical scratches and swirls of a daily driven vehicle and was in need of some serious paint correction to restore some shine to the beautiful bright white paint. The owner had just removed the clear bra from the front bumper and 1/3 of the hood, and thankfully the bumper was in very good shape (as you might hope from an area that has been covered for many years), the hood on the other hand was in very bad shape. Luckily, white is a rather forgiving paint color to be working with and it can allow you to be more aggressive than you can be with a darker paint color, while still finishing down well enough to not require an additional polishing step.

Process
-Wheels: CG Diablo Gel (4:1) w/ Wheel Woolies, Soft Wheel Sponge & Various Brushes
-Tires: Tuf Shine Tire Cleaner & Tuf Shine Tire Brush
-Bug & Tar Pre-Soak: CG Bug Bugger & Tar Remover (6:1)
-Pre-Soak: CG Citrus Wash (foam left to dwell for 5-7 minutes)
-Wash: CG Citrus Wash & Sheep Skin Wash Mitt
-Decontaminate: Iron X
-Dry: DI Waffle Weave Drying Towels
-Tape: 3M Blue Painters Tape
-Paint Thickness Readings Taken
-Polish: Menzerna PF2500 on Orange Light Cutting Pad via Rupes LHR21ES Sp. 5 (5.5" pads) & PC7424XP Sp. 5-6 (3" & 4" Pads)
-IPA Wipedown (~15% solution)
-Sealant: CG Black Light on Black Finishing Pad via PC7424XP Sp. 4
-Wax: CG Pete's 53 Black Pearl Signature Paste Wax via P21S Signature Wax Applicators
-Tire Dressing: Optimum Opti-Bond Tire Gel (3 coats due to tires soaking up the dressing)
-Exhaust Tips: CG Metal Wax (polish and protection) via MF Towel


Before

The car was pretty dirty when it showed up, but the defects were still easily visible. Swirls, scratches, water spots, bugs, dirt, etc.
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The wheels showed typical levels of dirt and brake dust build up.
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During

As always, I began by cleaning the wheels. CG Diablo Gel was left to dwell on the wheel for a minute or so in order to starts cutting through the brake dust and grime.
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After the wheel is clean, I move to the tire. Clean tires allow for a better look and longer lasting tire shine. These tires were quite dirty.
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After the wheels and tires were cleaned, the car was foamed and washed, it was then treated with Iron X to remove bonded Iron particles from the paint. Iron X is a very useful product that turns purple as it dissolves the iron. It is especially fun to work with on a white car so you can really see the color transformation as the product is working.
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Once the paint was clean and free of contamination, I was able to see the real condition of it. It had a lot of swirls and deeper scratches. Here you can see the texture in the paint due to the large amount of swirls.
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After a thorough inspection, I began with my test spot on the hood. Here is the spot prior to polishing.
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Cleaned up nicely!
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Fender prior to correction.
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After Correction.
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Trunk prior to correction.
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After Correction.
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Before/After Video of trunk section:


Other fender prior to correction.
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After Correction.
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Door prior to correction.
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After correction.
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50/50 Shot comparing the front door (polished) to rear door (not yet polished).
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50/50 Shot showing the corrected section vs. uncorrected section on the rear passenger door. Nice improvement!
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Nicely Polished paint!
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Polishing exhaust tips - left has been cleaned, right has not.
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Exhaust tip before
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And after polishing & protection
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After

Once polishing was complete, the car was coated with a layer of sealant and then a layer of wax. It is difficult to show the gloss of a white vehicle in bright sunlight, so I took a couple of pictures inside the garage to show off the intense shine that the paint had!
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Car looked great, very bright and very white!
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Wheels and tires all cleaned up.
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Nice and glossy finish... not too bad for a white car!
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Glamour Shot.
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As always, Thanks for looking! Questions/Comments are very welcome!
 
Really nice job. I love polished white. It is very hard to catch the defects in camera, you did a great job of that as well as getting them out.

I saw that you used wax on the Camaro and this BMW. You spent so much time on the prep, it a shame not to coat it up and preserve all that hard work? The wax looks great but how long can it last?
 
Really nice job. I love polished white. It is very hard to catch the defects in camera, you did a great job of that as well as getting them out.

I saw that you used wax on the Camaro and this BMW. You spent so much time on the prep, it a shame not to coat it up and preserve all that hard work? The wax looks great but how long can it last?

I offer several coating options to my customers - 22ple VX1 Pro, CQuartz Finest, and Opti-Coat, however of they are not interested (usually due to the additional cost) I use traditional methods of protection.
 
Great Job!!!!

Its nice to see you posting here as well. :D

This is the money IMO. This is hard to do on white. :drool:

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One of the best white reflections I have seen, great work.
Thank you!

Great Job!!!!

Its nice to see you posting here as well. :D

This is the money IMO. This is hard to do on white. :drool:

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Yeah, I joined autopia a long time ago but never made a post until today... I get lazy lol

I really like that shot as well... to be honest, the lighting that afternoon was just perfect. Typically white is so difficult to photograph because it is just so overpowering in bright sunlight. The cloudy, but still bright, skywas just the best possible lighting I could have hoped for to show off light colored paint!
 
Thank you!


Yeah, I joined autopia a long time ago but never made a post until today... I get lazy lol

I really like that shot as well... to be honest, the lighting that afternoon was just perfect. Typically white is so difficult to photograph because it is just so overpowering in bright sunlight. The cloudy, but still bright, skywas just the best possible lighting I could have hoped for to show off light colored paint!

I agree.. :yourrock
 
Thats some killer work. The gloss is insane.
^Thanks! Not too bad for a 1 step, huh? and again, it's all about having good lighting when taking the pics... even more so for a light colored vehicle. That really showed off the final finish way more than a bright sunny day would have.

Can you tell us how many hours?
^I cannot remember exactly, but given that it was a 1 step, I would assume it was about 8 hours from start to finish.
 
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