00 Plymouth Neon brought back to life (Lots of Before/After and 50/50 pictures)

FinalTouchAuto

New member
Detailed a 2000 Plymouth Neon yesterday.





This 2000 neon has NEVER been under cover out of the elements, has NEVER seen a coat of wax and hadn't been washed in at least 3 years.





The car was dropped off to me at 10 and I took about 30 minutes worth of pictures before getting into this mess.





I first let the car soak in a low dilution Chemical Guys Wash and Gloss (applied with a foam gun) while I cleaned the tires with Chemical Guys Grime Reaper and an adjustable wheel brush. I dressed the wheels and wheel-wells with Meguiars Hot Shine Gel.





When I was done with the wheels I refoamed the car and began a SERIOUS washing. I scrubbed all over the car (not caring if I made any small scratches because it COULDN'T get worse, so I just tried to clean it the best I could).





I then Clayed the car with Claymagic Blue Clay





Now was the moment of truth to begin polishing. I alternated different spots with Menzerna SIP and Meguiar's 105 depending on the severity of the area. He was only paying for a single-stage polish so I tried to get it to finish off the best I could. When I was done with polishing (1 complete pass over the car took me just over 3 hours) I did an initial wipe-down with Chemical Guys Acrylic Detailer.





I then applied Chemical Guys EZ-Creme Glaze/Acrylic Sealant by PC on a black pad and let it sit for about 45 minutes before removing it.





After it was completely removed I did a final wipedown with Meguiars Ultimate Quick Wax and called it a day, 6 hours later.





No question about it, this car needed wet-sanding and multiple stages of polishing, but the customer got what he wanted to pay for and it came out much better than he was expecting. I was pleased with the results for the work put in.





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The roof had some severe oxidation that I wasn't able to remove here.



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Now on to the detail...





Foamed it up first and let it set while I cleaned the wheels and then foamed it up again to clean the car



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Clayed half of the hood...



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Done washing and claying...drying for polishing now.



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Hood section before:



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Hood Section After (Keep in mind he was only paying for a single stage polish, so I couldn't spend all the time needed to completely refine it...it got the majority of the major issues though):



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The hood LITERALLY changed colors in front of me it was so oxidized...it was great.





Rear Quarter Panel Before:





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After 1 stage polish:



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Trunk with direct lighting before:





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Trunk after 1 stage polish:



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In this next picture both the top and bottom of the door looked about the same after washing....guess which portion has been polished at this point (this is my favorite picture I have taken to date, ha ha...my wife loved how drastic it is)





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Passenger side 50/50:





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Wheels/tires after cleaning and dressing:



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Headlight after wash, clay and PlastX applied via PC and 4" orange pad:



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All done



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It was IMPOSSIBLE to finish the roof down at all. It desperately needed wet sanding, but I did what I could. It regained a lot of clarity and removed a lot of major swirls, but you can only do so much with a single pass.



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Thanks for looking. This car was a LOT of work and could still use another 6 hours of labor into it, but the customer was ecstatic with the transformation when he came back after work to pick it up and I was happy to do what I could while staying in the parameters of what I was being paid to do (which is sometimes very difficult when you know it would finish off better with another 2 hours of finishing polish).[/QUOTE]
 
Wow, what a turnaround. I originally thought the car was blue and then it transformed to purple.



Great job given the circumstances :)
 
corrswitch said:
Wow, what a turnaround. I originally thought the car was blue and then it transformed to purple.



Great job given the circumstances :)



Yeah, there were very few signs of the car being purple when I first got it :nervous:



When I made my first complete pass across a section of the hood (figuring out which products to use) it literally looked like I took a paintbrush of purple across it. I laughed out loud because when the customer dropped it off he said "I know you can't work miracles, but if you can polish it into a different color that'd be great".
 
Very true!



I really find more satisfaction in bringing a beaten DD to a point the owner didn't think they'd ever see again than detailing a high-end car.



Drastic changes are always a lot of fun :) Thanks to this car I now have my favorite 50/50 shot ha ha.
 
Do you have any afters of the roof oxidation? My wife's car had some oxidation like that when we sold it. I'm curious to see what it would have looked like if I had worked on it at all.



It's unfortunate that the customer didn't go for a full correction. It probably would have made you even more proud to see a perfect finish after such a drastic transformation
 
Well I THOUGHT that it was severe oxidation, but it was actually the beginnings of clear-coat failure in those places where it was just turning white, but not yet peeling or totally failing.



There wasn't anything I could do for those areas :bawling:



Apparently this type of failure is fairly common on Neons if the surface isn't maintained.
 
Yeah, now that you mention it, here in New england I see a lot of neons with very severe clear coat failure on roof and hood areas.
 
RedlineIRL said:
Nice turnaround. It's surprising that the owner cared enough to have someone really detail it after not caring at all for that long



He said he needed to get it "date-ready". A girl can make a guy do a lot of things, ha ha.
 
Looks great! These are my favourite kinds of details. There are some impressive details on newer cars but the ones on old neglected cars that are brought back I find at least for me are truer to life, and a much greater challenge than the "I made a brand new Aston Martin shiny and clean" posts.
 
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