First posting of a detail I did. 88' BMW E28 M5

Here's my first contribution to the click and brag. My picture taken skills suck and I use a point and shoot that has been dropped a few too many times. Please be gentle. :)



This particular detail was very exciting to me because you could see the transformation slowly unravel before my eyes. It's also a black car which is the hardest to work on but the most fun IMHO.



So what we got here is a 1988 BMW M5 which I was told is very rare in the U.S. There are 3 on this island which is known about including this one. The other which never sees the outside world and the last which was seen being driven by an old lady in the Aiea area. That being said I was kinda shock to see the car in that condition. Apparently when they made the move to their present home the garage served as a storage as they were settling in so the cars had to park on the side for some months which got daily showers via lawn sprinklers. :(



All in all the detail covered the span of 2 days with a total of 12 1/2 hours. I had fun! :)



Hope you guys like it!



Some before shots.



Partial hood



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Passenger door



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Passenger rear fender



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Passenger front fender



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More hood shots before



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So the wash was the ussual. All lowers pre treated with Oil Eater Citrus Degreaser and rinsed. Full body soak with CG Citrus Wash & Gloss through Gilmore Foam Gun which was left to dwell for 5 min then pressure washed off. The car was then bathed again using CG CW&G and rinse bucket with grit guard using a Zymol sponge for the upper half and a MF Chenille mitt for the lower half. Rinsed and clayed with Sonus clay and bathed again.



Paint correction was handled by Flex XC3401VRG with LC Wool foam pad and Megs #105 followed by LC CCS Green pad and Menz 106f. For the more intricate areas a MF towel and SIP was used followed with 106f.





Close up shot of the hood after. Scratches and swirls have been leveled of but pitting was too deep for correction. Results were great none the less.



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50/50 shot of driver side door. Top half corrected and bottom untouched.



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Driver door before



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Driver door after



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After the paint correction was finished I wanted to give it a layer of DWG using my Flex and LC Black Finishing pad. It was my first try of the DWG and the results were quite nice. Very easy to apply and wipe off. It gave a very nice glow and the reflections were already amazing! the DWG didn't have a cure time in its directions but I tried to let it sit as long as I could let it...maybe like an hour. Then top it off with Swissvax Concorso.



Full hood shot after.



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I had to get my mug in here some how!



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Passenger side fully corrected

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Wheels were cleaned with P21s wheel gel and assortment of brushes and a wheel mit. Tires and wheel wells were scrubbed with purple power and dressed with Swissvax Pneu for the tires and Megs Hyper Dressing 4:1 for the wells.

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Great work!worst waterspots I've ever seen,M5's are not exactly a common car even here in Europe,not sure I'd put a budget tyre like a Kumho's on it if it were my car though.
 
Great job on correcting! Those water spots were really bad!



I have the same car (year, color and everything) scheduled in August and am really looking forward to it!! I am in California and the guy is buying it and having it shipped from Massachusettes or somewhere like that.



So...what did you use on the exterior trim?
 
Great work, the paint actually looks nice deep and glossy now.





Mr.Concours said:
Great work!worst waterspots I've ever seen,M5's are not exactly a common car even here in Europe,not sure I'd put a budget tyre like a Kumho's on it if it were my car though.



Those are Kumho Ecsta tires, not exactly what I would consider a budget tire.
 
Nice work :cool:

Did you think about doing anything with the plastic grill the goes the width of the car and around the headlights, also in between the taillights?



Kumho tires are excellent tires. Compared to the price of Michelins everything is a budget tire lol :D
 
Yal said:
Did you think about doing anything with the plastic grill the goes the width of the car and around the headlights, also in between the taillights?



I was wondering the same thing about the trim around the taillights.....not cutting on ya.....just asking a question about something you might have overlooked!! :xyxthumbs
 
mose said:
Great job on correcting! Those water spots were really bad!





So...what did you use on the exterior trim?



Thank you. I started using this product called Magic Dressing from Auto Magic. Wanna see how this works out in the long wrong. Tried using water based products but they leave run marks when it rains...or is hit by water sprinklers. LOL
 
Yal said:
Nice work :cool:

Did you think about doing anything with the plastic grill the goes the width of the car and around the headlights, also in between the taillights?



mose said:
I was wondering the same thing about the trim around the taillights.....not cutting on ya.....just asking a question about something you might have overlooked!! :xyxthumbs



Thanks for the kind comments.



Thanks for looking out. I actually did not want to use anything on this visit in hopes of finding something thats not so greasy in feel and look. So far everything I've tried washes off and leaves streaks and/or is too greasy and attracts dust and dirt like flies on !@#$. Is there something out there you guys are pleased with that looks great on faded hard plastics like this?
 
Wow, amazing recovery on that M5! It came out really glossy and deep.



Kumho Ecstas are actually pretty good tires. They're often used in the tuner world so they aren't by any means budget. When budget tires come to mind, I think of bi-directional non-brand name tires.



I've had great success with Black WOW and PB's Trim Restorer isn't bad either.
 
Shea Luxury said:
Thanks for the kind comments.



Thanks for looking out. I actually did not want to use anything on this visit in hopes of finding something thats not so greasy in feel and look. So far everything I've tried washes off and leaves streaks and/or is too greasy and attracts dust and dirt like flies on !@#$. Is there something out there you guys are pleased with that looks great on faded hard plastics like this?



If I had to pick something to use I would try Black Wow. Even though I just started using it and am having some "learning curve" issues with it....it looks like something that will last a really long time. Just make sure you follow the instructions!!
 
Mr.Concours said:
Great work!worst waterspots I've ever seen,M5's are not exactly a common car even here in Europe,not sure I'd put a budget tyre like a Kumho's on it if it were my car though.



BMW autocrossers are all about Kumho MX's. Killer tire for the money. Big grip, low price. Kumho makes a very good product--just not as blingy as Pirelli or Michelin.



Anyway, amazing work on such a rare bird. From disastrous to gorgeous. :goodjob
 
Thanks for the kind comments everybody. :)



As for the Black Wow, I have a small bottle and tried it once. Luckily it was applied to a friends truck. For one it was kind of a challenge to get it on evenly. (Smooth plastics. Textured trim wasn't really a problem.) It also left the door handles very greasy to the touch even after 3 days after application. The residual was wiped off when let set for almost an hour but even that threw the evenness off and had reapply to get it decent. It also attracted dust. But the main complaint was that it was greasy to the touch even after days of application.
 
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