DetailDamon
New member
A coworker of mine has an older Mini Cooper S he wants to sell. He has a Boxster as well and the Mini has been his golfing/bike riding/winter car for several years. It definitely needed some love. It pretty much needed love in every spot. The engine was a mess, there were coffee and pop stains everywhere inside, and the body was pretty scratched up. The back bumper cover and the front end needed a respray from abuse and rock chips, so my job with this car was going to win the battle and not the war. I was determined to do my best.
Products used. Jeesh, I can't believe I own all this stuff:
Exterior:
Wash:
Gloss-It Car Shampoo
Gloss-It Car Wash Mit
Gloss-It Grit Guard
Gloss-It Signature Wheel Gel
Gloss-It White Drying Towel
Uber red waffle drying cloth
Simple Green
Gunk Engine Degreaser
Parts washer Brush
Griots Garage Boar's Hair Wheel Brush
Griots Garage 4 finger Lambskin Mitt
Clay-Magic Blue claybar
Griot's Garage Yellow mild claybar
Polish:
DeWalt Rotary
Griots Garage DA 850 watt polisher
Gloss-It 3" Backing plate
Gloss-It 5" Backing plate
Gloss-It 3.75" Wool Pad
Gloss-It 3.75" Red Polish Pad
Gloss-It 5.75" Fast Cut White Pad
Gloss-It 5.75" Yellow Light Cut Foam Pad
Gloss-It EVP Pad Prime
Gloss-It Extreme Cut
Gloss-It Evolution Cut
Gloss-It Evolution Polish
Gloss-It Gloss Enhancer
Gloss-It Microfiber towels
Griot's Garage 6" Glass polishing pads
Griot's Garage Rubber Cleaner
Alcohol/water mix
Finish:
Gloss-It 5.75" Green Polishing Foam
Gloss-It 5.75" Red Ultra Polishing Foam
Gloss-It 100ppi applicator pads
Gloss-It Gloss Activator
Gloss-It Gloss Finish
Gloss-It Concourso Gloss
Gloss-It T.R.V.
Gloss-It Tire Gloss
Gloss-It Gloss Enhancer
Gloss-It Microfiber towels
Griot's Garage Undercarriage Spray
Griot's Garage Foam Swabs
Stoner's Invisible Glass
Mother's Back To Black
3/4" foam paint brushes
Turtle Wax Chrome Polish
Interior:
Warm, die-free soapy water
Griot's Garage Leather Polish
Griot's Garage Nylon Carpet and Upholstry Brush
1/2" course paint brush
Gloss-It Microfiber towels
Gloss-It T.R.V.
Lotsa Q-Tips
Stoner's Invisible Glass
Here are the before wash pics at 6:15 am day 1.
This is all I got in almost no sun of the full car.
From the bike rack. It had smashed itself into the paint from being tightened down:
Anybody hungry?
The wheels? The worst I have ever had to tackle, by far. Under all the washable brake dust is a layer of brake lining that has baked into the wheels. We'll get to that later.....
I popped the hood lever, said a little prayer, and then opened it up:
I had a few cans of spray degreaser in the garage I had been saving for a serious job, so they got dusted off and used.
Everything was agitated using my favorite engine brush - nice stiff nylon bristles:
After agitating I let it sit. The sun still hadn't come over the trees yet so I kept it wet with a mild Simple Green/water mix and moved onto the wheels.
After comparing to P21s and Griot's, I have become a big fan of the Gloss-It Signature Wheel Gel. Overall it just works the best. I sprayed the wheels and let them sit:
After about 10 minutes, the runoff alone was pretty amazing. This was with NO agitation:
If this isn't a testemonial to how well it works, I don't know what is.
I decied to keep them soaking and wet as long as I could and move to the body.
I took a few before pics before the pre-soak. Scratches that need sanding and spots that need paint were just everywhere.
The deal wasn't any sanding or painting on this one, so it was my job to just make it look the best I could with pads and polish.
Onto the presoak. The entire car was sprayed with Gloss-It shampoo from my cheap foamer and allowed to sit with everything else. You can see the sun catching me in the background.
By now I was really wishing I had a working powerwasher. But they don't do well when dropped off a roof. That's another story.....
I agitated and scrubbed everything the best I could everywhere and rinsed. After re-soaping I claybarred the car with my Clay-Magic bar:
This car had more rail dust than Norfolk Southern:
By now it was 9:30am. I already had 3 hours into the car and the wheels STILL looked like this:
Again, this was primarily baked-in iron from the car needing a brake job long before it got one, and good ol' BMW brake pads. I ended up removing them from the car in order to get the leverage to rub more on them. I spent over 3 hours on the wheels alone and still only got it about 90% off. Some of it wasn't coming out without taking paint with it. I had to resort to laquer thinner to break it loose. I don't recommend this practice without testing a spot bhind a spoke at a minimum, as I could feel it softening the paint. When you are getting to the point where you have to let the paint re-harden before you can polish it, then you are pushing your luck. I wasn't comfortable at all doing this, but it's all that was working. After about 45 minutes it went from
This:
To this:
3 to go.....
Products used. Jeesh, I can't believe I own all this stuff:
Exterior:
Wash:
Gloss-It Car Shampoo
Gloss-It Car Wash Mit
Gloss-It Grit Guard
Gloss-It Signature Wheel Gel
Gloss-It White Drying Towel
Uber red waffle drying cloth
Simple Green
Gunk Engine Degreaser
Parts washer Brush
Griots Garage Boar's Hair Wheel Brush
Griots Garage 4 finger Lambskin Mitt
Clay-Magic Blue claybar
Griot's Garage Yellow mild claybar
Polish:
DeWalt Rotary
Griots Garage DA 850 watt polisher
Gloss-It 3" Backing plate
Gloss-It 5" Backing plate
Gloss-It 3.75" Wool Pad
Gloss-It 3.75" Red Polish Pad
Gloss-It 5.75" Fast Cut White Pad
Gloss-It 5.75" Yellow Light Cut Foam Pad
Gloss-It EVP Pad Prime
Gloss-It Extreme Cut
Gloss-It Evolution Cut
Gloss-It Evolution Polish
Gloss-It Gloss Enhancer
Gloss-It Microfiber towels
Griot's Garage 6" Glass polishing pads
Griot's Garage Rubber Cleaner
Alcohol/water mix
Finish:
Gloss-It 5.75" Green Polishing Foam
Gloss-It 5.75" Red Ultra Polishing Foam
Gloss-It 100ppi applicator pads
Gloss-It Gloss Activator
Gloss-It Gloss Finish
Gloss-It Concourso Gloss
Gloss-It T.R.V.
Gloss-It Tire Gloss
Gloss-It Gloss Enhancer
Gloss-It Microfiber towels
Griot's Garage Undercarriage Spray
Griot's Garage Foam Swabs
Stoner's Invisible Glass
Mother's Back To Black
3/4" foam paint brushes
Turtle Wax Chrome Polish
Interior:
Warm, die-free soapy water
Griot's Garage Leather Polish
Griot's Garage Nylon Carpet and Upholstry Brush
1/2" course paint brush
Gloss-It Microfiber towels
Gloss-It T.R.V.
Lotsa Q-Tips
Stoner's Invisible Glass
Here are the before wash pics at 6:15 am day 1.
This is all I got in almost no sun of the full car.

From the bike rack. It had smashed itself into the paint from being tightened down:

Anybody hungry?

The wheels? The worst I have ever had to tackle, by far. Under all the washable brake dust is a layer of brake lining that has baked into the wheels. We'll get to that later.....



I popped the hood lever, said a little prayer, and then opened it up:





I had a few cans of spray degreaser in the garage I had been saving for a serious job, so they got dusted off and used.


Everything was agitated using my favorite engine brush - nice stiff nylon bristles:

After agitating I let it sit. The sun still hadn't come over the trees yet so I kept it wet with a mild Simple Green/water mix and moved onto the wheels.
After comparing to P21s and Griot's, I have become a big fan of the Gloss-It Signature Wheel Gel. Overall it just works the best. I sprayed the wheels and let them sit:

After about 10 minutes, the runoff alone was pretty amazing. This was with NO agitation:

If this isn't a testemonial to how well it works, I don't know what is.
I decied to keep them soaking and wet as long as I could and move to the body.
I took a few before pics before the pre-soak. Scratches that need sanding and spots that need paint were just everywhere.




The deal wasn't any sanding or painting on this one, so it was my job to just make it look the best I could with pads and polish.
Onto the presoak. The entire car was sprayed with Gloss-It shampoo from my cheap foamer and allowed to sit with everything else. You can see the sun catching me in the background.

By now I was really wishing I had a working powerwasher. But they don't do well when dropped off a roof. That's another story.....
I agitated and scrubbed everything the best I could everywhere and rinsed. After re-soaping I claybarred the car with my Clay-Magic bar:

This car had more rail dust than Norfolk Southern:

By now it was 9:30am. I already had 3 hours into the car and the wheels STILL looked like this:


Again, this was primarily baked-in iron from the car needing a brake job long before it got one, and good ol' BMW brake pads. I ended up removing them from the car in order to get the leverage to rub more on them. I spent over 3 hours on the wheels alone and still only got it about 90% off. Some of it wasn't coming out without taking paint with it. I had to resort to laquer thinner to break it loose. I don't recommend this practice without testing a spot bhind a spoke at a minimum, as I could feel it softening the paint. When you are getting to the point where you have to let the paint re-harden before you can polish it, then you are pushing your luck. I wasn't comfortable at all doing this, but it's all that was working. After about 45 minutes it went from
This:

To this:

3 to go.....