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My5ABaby said:Well... yeah... But they can cover up a screw up can't they?
My5ABaby said:Well... yeah... But they can cover up a screw up can't they?
JoshVette said:Only sometimes. If the area of the car in question looks dull, foggy or anything like hundreds of thin fine scratches then they screwed it up. It should look new again since it is new right.
Don't freak out too much though, if anythings wrong I'm sure it can get corrected by a real pro detailer at the dealerships expense.
Dylan06SS said:Better bet is to go get your car before they do anything and remove the contaminant yourself... or at the very least have a professional detailer do it. Paying a qualified professional to correct the problem now is much better than paying a body shop to reshoot your clear coat later IMO.
JDookie said:+1
Brake cleaner is some really nasty stuff. I've actually used brake cleaner to purposely remove paint before.
Also, there *are* different types of brake cleaner too. This may have something to do with varying results. I find some cleaners to be extremely strong, and others extremely mild. All I know is that the stuff I get from NAPA is super strong.
cgage said:They have mislead you on numerous occaisions, I would get my car back immediately and save your pennies for a detailer.
If you insist on letting them sand the vehicle, make sure to strip whatever LSP they put on (if any) to ensure that no fillers were used to hide holos etc. If you find something, take pictures and tell them you are taking it to a pro and sending them the bill. Sometimes it helps to go to the regional rep too.
My5ABaby said:Oh, and he also said to not worry about the 1500 grit and "we also have used 800 grit without hurting the clear coat". :bat
Totoland Mach said:Whoa! .... I don't know of anyone who uses 800 grit except to remove bondo.
Here's what I'd tell the Service Mgr: That you plan to pick up the car and use a paint thickness guage prior to acceptance. Tell him you will measure a new car on the lot and then measure your car. If he is good to his word, there should be no measurement differences.
That might frighten him into re-considering his statements.
Toto
GTFreddy said:Alright, to strip your lsp mix rubbing alcohol and water 1:1 in a spray bottle. That will strip off any wax or glaze that they put on your car to mask the scratch marks they will most likely put in it. 800 grit paper to remove orange peel is rediculous, that will strip down to the metal. When you pick up the car make sure it looks like the rest of the car or at least the rest of that panel. Look at it in direct sunlight from different angles and make sure that there is no haziness or swirling after you wipe down the area with the alcohol mix and a soft microfibre. And you can just bluf on the ptg.
Totoland Mach said:Good for you My5ABaby: 3000 grit is what I use almost daily and with a competent body shop, you should be fine.
Sometimes car stories do have positive endings!
Toto
My5ABaby said:It gives me peace of mind that it's with a company that gets paid to do work as opposed to a grease monkey that gets paid hourly and could care less. At least I think it does...
auto eddie said:Grease Monkey? What did the working guy do to you?
auto eddie said:Reading this post, it sounds like you turned your car over to someone, then asked a forum about what he said, then called the service mgr, repeated what the forum said, got an answer, posted on the forum, then called the service manager with what the forum said...
auto eddie said:At the 800 grit comment, they were probably yanking your chain to see what would happen next. Then the body shop manager and him would have a good yuck when you called back.
auto eddie said:I expect to get flamed for this, but calling some working guy who MAY want to do a good job but is either rushed or not allowed to do as good a job as he wants because of management, sets me off.
auto eddie said:The detailers with their own business do it more so out of passion for doing a good job, and a lot a times their posts say they under estimated the time it would take to do a job RIGHT. Since they bid it wrong, they eat the loss, and that is the risk of being in business for yourself. But, they want it done right when it leaves their shop. Shoot, I bet there is someone out there that was a "grease monkey", learned the trade, didn't lose the passion, got sick of not being able to do a good job, and left to do it the right way, and probably struggled to make it on their own.
Dylan06SS said:Glad to hear everything turned out ok.