Black Audi A4. Lots of before/after photos! Esoteric Auto Detail.

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This car was courtesy of a referral from Twista616...thank you!



This week's feature detail is a black Audi A4. Black is the most challenging color to polish to perfection as it shows every single flaw, and it requires several polish steps starting with compounding to remove heavy defects, and ends with finish polishing to remove the haze left by the compound and to ultimately bring out a deep gloss. When you also consider that Audi has arguably the hardest clear coat in the business (which means it takes longer to polish), I knew that I was going to spend a considerable amount of time on this vehicle.



The owner of the A4 bought this car used earlier in the year from a local dealer. As part of their prep process, they had an unskilled rotary user attack the black paint (bad combination!), and did more damage than good. When the owner took delivery, the car was conveniently parked in the shade where the damage couldn't be seen. I suspect they also used filling glazes that would temporarily hide the true condition of the paint. A rotary polisher in the wrong hands can do a lot of damage...best case scenario the car is left with buffer burn/buffer trails/holograms. Not only did this car have bad holograms, but it looks like the buffing pad that was used had abrasive dirt in it, which caused deep, swirling scratches that were pretty severe in some areas. We've all seen the cars that may appear shiny, but covered in these holograms all over. I regularly correct this kind of damage that is caused by dealers and "inexpensive" detail jobs.



When I was done, I corrected all of the previous damage, and brought depth and gloss to the finish that it hadn't seen since it was brand new. There were a few deep scratches that could only be made better, but in the end I got about 97% correction rate. The wheels and exhaust tips required a considerable amount of work, and I even had to wetsand the exhaust tips to bring them back to life.



Process:

Dawn wash to remove any remaining wax

Clay

Wash again

Blow dry using Blaster Sidekick

IPA (isopropyl alcohol) wipedown

Windows cleaned with Stoner's Invisible Glass



Clean wheels with Meg's Wheel Brighterner

Wheel wells cleaned with Meg's APC+

Tires dressed with Sonus Tire Gel



Exhaust tips cleaned with 0000 steel wool

"" 1500 grit wetsand

"" 2000 grit wetsand



Polishing:

Megs 95 with Purple Foamed Wool for leveling stage

IPA wipedown

Menzerna 106FF with white pad for finishing stage

IPA wipedown

Optimum car wax by hand



Tools used:

Makita 9227 rotary polisher

Porter Cable DA polisher

Blaster Sidekick dryer

Canon Rebel XSi with 18/55mm lense



Total time: 10.5 hours



Notice the holograms/buffer trails in the hood. The camera couldn't capture how bad these really were...some of the worst I have seen.

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The wheels were caked with brake dust!

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At one point in time, these were stainless.

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Here is a half/half after one pass with PFW/Megs 95. Looks much better already.

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Here is a before where you can see the severity of the buffer burn:

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After leveling stage:

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Before:

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After:

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Before:

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After:

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Before:

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After:

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Remember how bad that hood looked before? How about this shot after...

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I like this shot...lots of reflections everywhere.

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This shot isn't to show off the clutter in my garage, but rather the clarity of the reflections. Highly polished black paint FTW!

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For the PFW/95 stage, most was completed in one pass (assuming you're referring to a pass as the working of a section until the polish is broken down), but some of the tougher areas (hood, front fenders, trunk lid) required two. The finishing with 106FF was all done in one pass.



I really like the Sonus tire gel. Not too shiny, and doesn't collect a lot of grime.
 
I have P21S 100% which looks great, but doesn't last long at all. I've been testing a single coat of OCW on my wife's van, and it still looks great and beads well all summer long...pretty good durability for not being an all-out sealant. Nothing I could have put on now would have lasted all winter long, and I suggested to the owner that the car gets a coat of durable wax or sealant in late November or early December to get it through winter time.
 
Gotcha. Just kinda surprised that so much work went into that and you only applied a spray-on wax. I do love OCW and use it regularly, but I guess it's just the Autopian in me that expected so much more (i.e. I just finished putting 2 coats of OS and two coats of OCW over that on my new jetta ;) ).
 
Todd, awesome job!! I just talked to Jason and he said you did an outstanding job...I can tell by the pictures!! Well done!! Now shoot some business my way!! Kidding!!



I almost referred him to stiffdogg...who disappeared on us!! But i see hes back!!
 
Twista616 said:
Todd, awesome job!! I just talked to Jason and he said you did an outstanding job...I can tell by the pictures!! Well done!! Now shoot some business my way!! Kidding!!



I almost referred him to stiffdogg...who disappeared on us!! But i see hes back!!



back and better than ever.:woot2:
 
Twista616 said:
Todd, awesome job!! I just talked to Jason and he said you did an outstanding job...I can tell by the pictures!! Well done!! Now shoot some business my way!! Kidding!!



Yeah, he was really pumped!



If I hear anything up your way, I'll most definitely get in touch! Thanks again Garrett.
 
Wow, I can't believe how bad the dealer hacked that car up!



Unbelievable job bringing it back to life!!



Great work!!
 
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