About a year ago I brought my previous Jet Black 330Ci to a highly recommended detailer to remove swirls and scratches. He claimed to specialize in black cars. The guy spent 3 hours on my car, and after I got it back, it looked no better than when I brought it in. In fact, some areas looked worse, especially where he tried his wet sanding technique.
Fast forward to yesterday. My "new" Mystic Blue 2005 330Ci had a good amount of swirls/scratches on the right hand side where the car had been repainted. I found someone on this board to attempt to tackle the job. He came out, looked at the swirls/scratches, said he could get them out using his PC, and two hours later I was still looking at a car with swirls and scratches. As before, some areas looked even worse, having a whitish haze look to it, which I think is a result of a lot of fine scratches somehow introduced by his PC.
So here is my big question: Is it even possible to get your paint to a state that if I get up close to it that I should not see any swirls or scratches, or at least a vast majority of them? Do I keep picking the wrong people for the job, or am I just expecting too much?
Fast forward to yesterday. My "new" Mystic Blue 2005 330Ci had a good amount of swirls/scratches on the right hand side where the car had been repainted. I found someone on this board to attempt to tackle the job. He came out, looked at the swirls/scratches, said he could get them out using his PC, and two hours later I was still looking at a car with swirls and scratches. As before, some areas looked even worse, having a whitish haze look to it, which I think is a result of a lot of fine scratches somehow introduced by his PC.
So here is my big question: Is it even possible to get your paint to a state that if I get up close to it that I should not see any swirls or scratches, or at least a vast majority of them? Do I keep picking the wrong people for the job, or am I just expecting too much?