Accumulator
Well-known member
Ever try red clay magic?
Heh heh, you got me there! I was leaving overspray/other aggressive clay out of the discussion. There was even a production run of Sonus Gray that was *really* abrasive, I couldn't use that stuff without marring up even the hardest clear!
But regarding regular "decontaminating clay"-
Originally Posted by Oldfordisbetter![]()
I would love to clay a car and not cause any marring. Someone tell me how to do it! I guess put no pressure on the clay? And use lots of lube. Would like to skip polishing for people who know nothing about good looking paint, but so far I always polish because most times the paint looks worse after claying.
Claying the way I do is so labor/time/clay-intensive that I bet most people simply won't do it like that, but:
-yeah, virtually zero pressure, just enough to keep the clay where you want it (obviously, that means more pressure on vertical surfaces)
-plenty of lube and use a good one (I prefer Sonus Glyde over everything else I've tried)
-nearly constant kneading/replacing of the clay; the instant it picks up some abrasive contamination it turns into sandpaper, so this can mean only claying an inch or so at a time
See why people consider my claying technique and say they'd rather just mar it up and polish?!?
AND...perhaps most importantly IMO, if a vehicle is really contaminated, *don't clay it*. Decontaminate it via chemical means use as ValuGard's ABC (again, working very gently). Works better than clay as it gets into the pores/microfissures of the paint, and you avoid the "clay instantly turning into sandpaper"-effect if you get most of the abrasive [stuff] off with the chemicals instead.