tom p.
Active member
I spent some time this weekend doing my spring cleanup on my car. My basic game plan is the same I’ve used for years: Clay (Meguiar’s Mild yellow) > KAIO (via machine) > 2X FK 1000p (via machine)</SPAN>
At the end of my session, everything looked and felt as expected, the surface was hugely gloss and certainly slick to the touch. Good! I’m done. </SPAN>
A bit later in the day I was chatting with a fellow Autopian via telephone and we discussed my new Griot’s RO polisher. I told him I liked it quite a bit and was hoping it would serve as well as my PC. He asked me if I did the plastic bag test and I said, “no”. After we hung up, I did the plastic bag test on a few surfaces, and much to my horror, it sounded like I was rubbing my hand across sand paper. Not good. Even worse, I had OptiCoated the hood, front fenders and bumper of the car a few weeks ago and I spent a good deal of time polishing and prepping the nose of the car. The OptiCoated sections are by far the worse in terms of bonded contamination. FWIW, none of this is visible (to me) and you can’t really feel it with your hand. I suspect it’s probably a blend of tree “sap” and environmental fallout. The horizontal panels are the worse, doors/vertical panels aren’t too bad.</SPAN>
I’m not sure how much effort one should have to expend on this. I attempted to remove some serious damage on the hood of a car we adopted a few weeks ago and polished the heck out of it with Meg’s Ultimate Compound followed by Meg’s #205. I then cleaned with IPA and coated the hood with OptiCoat. The surface looked great, but the scratches were not all removed, but I was not going and farther with it. Again, to my surprise, the hood could not pass the plastic bag test even after my efforts with these two Meg’s products. So, all of this has me scratching my head and wondering if I can actually remove whatever is on the surface so it will pass the plastic bag test.</SPAN>
While I can add more prep steps, there’s going to be a limit on how much time I’m willing to invest to correct this. I’m sure some of you will have experienced this problem. Have you found any direct solutions?</SPAN>
Thanks.</SPAN>
At the end of my session, everything looked and felt as expected, the surface was hugely gloss and certainly slick to the touch. Good! I’m done. </SPAN>
A bit later in the day I was chatting with a fellow Autopian via telephone and we discussed my new Griot’s RO polisher. I told him I liked it quite a bit and was hoping it would serve as well as my PC. He asked me if I did the plastic bag test and I said, “no”. After we hung up, I did the plastic bag test on a few surfaces, and much to my horror, it sounded like I was rubbing my hand across sand paper. Not good. Even worse, I had OptiCoated the hood, front fenders and bumper of the car a few weeks ago and I spent a good deal of time polishing and prepping the nose of the car. The OptiCoated sections are by far the worse in terms of bonded contamination. FWIW, none of this is visible (to me) and you can’t really feel it with your hand. I suspect it’s probably a blend of tree “sap” and environmental fallout. The horizontal panels are the worse, doors/vertical panels aren’t too bad.</SPAN>
I’m not sure how much effort one should have to expend on this. I attempted to remove some serious damage on the hood of a car we adopted a few weeks ago and polished the heck out of it with Meg’s Ultimate Compound followed by Meg’s #205. I then cleaned with IPA and coated the hood with OptiCoat. The surface looked great, but the scratches were not all removed, but I was not going and farther with it. Again, to my surprise, the hood could not pass the plastic bag test even after my efforts with these two Meg’s products. So, all of this has me scratching my head and wondering if I can actually remove whatever is on the surface so it will pass the plastic bag test.</SPAN>
- Do I scrape the paint with a razor blade like the Overspray Guy? (j/k)</SPAN>
- Do I ignore the plastic bag test?</SPAN>
- Is my tried ‘n’ true product selection all wrong?</SPAN>
- Do I need to break out my Presta wool and the Makita to get the surfaces clean?</SPAN>
- Does a stronger chemical (or mechanical) cleaner exist that can quickly remove these contaminants?</SPAN>
- Do I need to start spending hours on each panel of the car ‘til it can pass the plastic bag test?</SPAN>
- Would one of the paintwork cleansing lotions help out? Is one stronger than another?</SPAN>
While I can add more prep steps, there’s going to be a limit on how much time I’m willing to invest to correct this. I’m sure some of you will have experienced this problem. Have you found any direct solutions?</SPAN>
Thanks.</SPAN>