997 Turbo fully wrapped with film correction

Another Porsche completed LATE last night........... had the usual problems ie:water spots,scuffs,stains and tons of fallout as it is a daily driver.

The biggest challenge though was the wheels, full polished HRE 8 series with chemical etching on the right front wheel and general oxidation and there is no easy way out on these just lot's "o" rubbin with metal polish.

This car had a unique and fully optioned interior(the customer checked every box on the Porsche configurator lol).

First thing dismount the wheels and settle in for a loooonnnnngggg day

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Example of chemical etching on the wheell

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Coming back to life

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Removed the center cao and re-indexed it to line up with the lug configuration

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While I had the wheels off I tightened up the wheel wells and suspension assembly

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Re-mounted the wheels and torqued to spec(96ft lbs) this is the after pic

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Tar marks on the film

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Super cleaness

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As mentioned before there were some bad scuffs and scratches in a couple of places

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After patient correcting

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Working the film with 106 FA and the Festool

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Look at this interior!! carbon fiber galore(me likey)

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Working the trim with GI TRV

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Finished at 7:00 pm so no sun pics(sorry)

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Bob, the car looks magnificent, but the detail on the center caps? it is truly sick. I love it! As I mentioned in my reply to one of Junebug?s threads today, it is people like you that have that attention to detail that separate the professionals from the hacks. Thank you for sharing this. I though I was the only sicko to look at how the caps aligned when on a rim?.
jk:notworthy:
 
There are two things in life that you can't have enough of: money and carbon fiber! :biggrin:

"Well done" is an understatement.

My favorite shot is the one that shows ol' Lonesome Bob, working late at night, under a single light, polishing wheels by hand. Dedication is when you leave the polisher on the shelf and grab a microfiber instead. ;)
 
Bob,

As always the car looks great. You need a steamer for the inside of the wheels, would have saved you tons of effort and time.

Cheers,
GREG
 
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