shortspark
New member
My new ride is a very pretty ML350, that is in "White Diamond" paint (a rather expensive paint option). I wanted to post photos of it since I've just detailed it but for some reason my forum permissions show that I do not have permission to post attachments. I don't know why as I've been here for years although I don't post that often. Anyway, I've heard this "diamond" paint is five coats of special German paint and it looks beautiful. I detailed it this past week (I bought it on May 29). It was beautiful off the showroom floor but I went to work right away washing what little road dust may have been on it from the trip home with ONR, then using Griot's clay and speed shine. There was no rail dust and the surface was clean as a whisker, even using the sandwich bag all around it still felt almost like glass. Nonetheless, I could feel the clay picking up a few contaminants here and there. I washed again. Then the Duragloss bonding agent was applied by hand. Over that went their Polish (105) and buffed both out. I let it cure overnight and gave it one more coat of Polish the next day. On the third day I sprayed my favorite topper product of all - Duragloss AquaWax. It looks great!
Although I have been playing around for years with various things and numerous products, I have pretty much decided Duragloss will be my main (although not exclusive) supplier due to availability, price, ease of use and overall performance. Now my question is should I invest in a polisher such as Griot, Porter or the new HD? I am retired and don't mind spending all the time I need doing it by hand (and I work on my cars often) and this great white paint can't get much better to my eyes (I don't think). Will such a paint, brand new like this and of such quality and condition really benefit from a machine? Might I do more harm than good?
Believe me, after what I spent on this car a few hundred bucks more for a good polisher is nothing but I don't want to throw money away either. I think it would be easier work of course but frankly, the paint was so good to begin with and no swirls were noted or correction necessary of any kind, I am wondering if getting all this electric stuff and various pads, etc. is overkill. I can certainly see it for people with many cars or those that have bought older vehicles with abused paint but this thing is really like a diamond out of the box! I really can't see doing more than a seal job (as I just described) about every six months with in between shots of AquaWax after each shampoo or wash. Perhaps that is all I need to do to maintain this vehicle, given the condition it is in right now.
If you all think I really should invest in an electric polisher, what should I get for this car and the particular paint it has? BTW, I have heard of car paint referred to as "hard" paint/"soft" paint. I don't know the difference. Does any one know if Mercedes uses "hard" or "soft" paint and how these kinds of paints should be treated differently?
Although I have been playing around for years with various things and numerous products, I have pretty much decided Duragloss will be my main (although not exclusive) supplier due to availability, price, ease of use and overall performance. Now my question is should I invest in a polisher such as Griot, Porter or the new HD? I am retired and don't mind spending all the time I need doing it by hand (and I work on my cars often) and this great white paint can't get much better to my eyes (I don't think). Will such a paint, brand new like this and of such quality and condition really benefit from a machine? Might I do more harm than good?
Believe me, after what I spent on this car a few hundred bucks more for a good polisher is nothing but I don't want to throw money away either. I think it would be easier work of course but frankly, the paint was so good to begin with and no swirls were noted or correction necessary of any kind, I am wondering if getting all this electric stuff and various pads, etc. is overkill. I can certainly see it for people with many cars or those that have bought older vehicles with abused paint but this thing is really like a diamond out of the box! I really can't see doing more than a seal job (as I just described) about every six months with in between shots of AquaWax after each shampoo or wash. Perhaps that is all I need to do to maintain this vehicle, given the condition it is in right now.
If you all think I really should invest in an electric polisher, what should I get for this car and the particular paint it has? BTW, I have heard of car paint referred to as "hard" paint/"soft" paint. I don't know the difference. Does any one know if Mercedes uses "hard" or "soft" paint and how these kinds of paints should be treated differently?