sacdetailing
New member
How much would you charge for one step polish, and of course and some bfwd LSP?
how about 2 step? or more? thanks for advise.
how about 2 step? or more? thanks for advise.
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Scottwax said:Depends on exactly what else is being done. I start exterior details (wash, clay, 1 DA polishing step and LSP) at $100 for small cars-takes about 2.5 hours total, and price and time go up depending on vehicle size. For 90% of the people interested in a detail, 1 DA polishing step is enough to make their jaw drop when they see the car.
LS1-MEX said:For That Detail I Start At $150 For Samll Cars.......if You Only Have Lc Pads....try Using The Grey Pad To Apply The M205......i Have Had Great Results On All Color Cars Espesially Black
vtec92civic said:what about if we don't have megs yellow pads? I got some LC pads that i don't like, Sonus and Uber pads . . . .
sacdetailing said:How much would you charge for one step polish, and of course and some bfwd LSP?
how about 2 step? or more? thanks for advise.
sacdetailing said:thanks. they dont realy get why u need expensive multiple steps, all they need is good shiny car lol.
What speed do i polish with? (Makita, LC 5.5" pads. I have m105,m205 compounds) AND LOTS OF DIFF. LC PADS. yellow, orange, and so on.
David Fermani said:I don't get that many cars that I can just do a 1 step on. If I do I try to charge atleast $300-400 for a 1st step with LSP on average size vehicles. Each step after that is $250-$300. The 1st step is slightly more due to the Prep, Clay, LSP and Dressing.
Scottwax said:Depends on exactly what else is being done. I start exterior details (wash, clay, 1 DA polishing step and LSP) at $100 for small cars-takes about 2.5 hours total, and price and time go up depending on vehicle size. For 90% of the people interested in a detail, 1 DA polishing step is enough to make their jaw drop when they see the car.
JoshVette said:I agree.
I charge $325 for my 1 step, but that includes interior, wash, clay, 1 step, rewash and LSP plus all the little things. I need to charge more too for how long it takes me.
In many cases I can get at least 50% correction or better and that's worth a lot too me. In some cases of softer paint cars, I can get 75%+ correction achieved and then they're getting way more for there money.
Josh
lecchilo said:For many average people, who aren't nearly as critical as most of the members on here, this 50% is great looking and worth spending the hard earned $150. However, $250 is way too much even for 100%. To these clients you have to sell the 1-step as a $150 service but also explain what they can expect, or better yet show them a test spot.
lecchilo said:Scott I've seen your work and don't doubt your abilities but how in the world are you able to finish a car in 2.5 hours? Considering an average sized sedan, to thoroughly wash the wheels it takes me 15 minutes working pretty quickly. Wash/dry makes it an hour. Claying at least 30 minutes so I'm at 1.5hrs now. To properly work in almost any polish, about 1/4 of the hood takes maybe 3-4 minutes at the very least. Multiply that by similar sized surfaces around the car (4 roof, 4 hood, 3 trunk, 8-10 sides and 4 bumpers) and I'm at over an hour in polishing. LSP, dressings, exhaust tips, etc. follows.
And this is working like an energizer bunny... would you mind breaking down your process like that just to compare. Thanks
JoshVette said:That's your opinion friend, and I do not consider my clientele to be merely "average" people and they ARE as much critical of there vehicles as I am...
They are happy to pay $325++ to have it done correctly by someone who takes pride in his work and make them happy without question knowing they can leave the keys (to there prize possession) and go to work with no one home to monitor the situation. That's called TRUST and you can't put a price tag on that my friend.:2thumbs:
Josh
Scottwax said:Using ONR, I can usually have the car cleaned and ready to polish in under an hour. I start with the wheels, tires and fenderwells, get them cleaned and dressed (so any dressing overspray gets washed when I was the car's body), then wash the car itself with ONR, claying at the same time. Once you get the area clean with ONR, you can then go over it with clay and then dry. We don't have serious fallout issues in the Dallas area so claying usually goes pretty fast. Clean the door and trunk jambs.
Then an hour of polishing, CMW takes 15 minutes or so to apply and remove, OS about 4-5 minutes to apply. Clean the glass inside and out, quick vacuum and dash/console wipe-down and done.
Someone paying $100-150 ish for a simple exterior detail with 1 DA polishing step isn't looking for perfection, just a clean, shiny and protected car. Corrections take me a lot longer due to the polishing required, along with deeper cleaning of the car.