HybridKOOP
New member
:aww:
Hey guys,
As I don’t post here very often, I do come back time to time to continually learn about the best detailing practices, and sometimes, I’m fortunate to learn from others mistakes.
I’m posting here today to hopefully save someone else from creating the catastrophe that I created yesterday. A little bit about my background: I’m 30 years old and have always kept all of my vehicles in excellent shape from the beginning of my car owning days. I discovered Autopia a few years back, and picked up a PC, Zaino, rotary, among other things. I have detailed other peoples cars for compensation, and consider myself to be pretty knowledgeable when it comes to paint care/restoration. I have even done quite a bit of body work and painted one of my last cars with a bare metal, BC/CC job from the ground up.
So, about 2 weeks ago I purchased a nice low mileage 2004 Honda S2000. The color is Grand Prix White (NH565). I live in Connecticut but purchased the car while down in Florida on business and had it shipped up. Upon arrival, I discovered that one of the front fenders had been off in the past… HOW did I miss that when I looked the car over? No idea. Anyway, I concluded that the fender never had paintwork done. It was most likely loosened or removed for PDR, as there was a wavy dent toward the front of the fender. Not a huge deal. I figured I’d either buy a brand new fender, or fix this one off of the car and paint it. The other part to this story is that the car came with original pinstripes from the dealer (adhesive). Why on earth anyone would put pinstripes on a sports car is beside me, but as you guessed, they were the first thing to begin my detailing process on the car this weekend to get it all shined up for the spring/summer. I began the detail with a couple of Dawn washes, and then spent 4-5 hours claying every square inch of the cars paint. By this time, I had peeled the pinstripes all off, but they did leave plenty of glue residue behind. The claying itself would take a LITTLE of the glue with it every once in a while, but by no means was it going to do the job. I then stepped up to some adhesive removers and various products like a citrus bug/tar remover to no avail. I then went and got my PC out with a white pad and some SMR. Nothing but a shinier fender. Something to note here is that I was doing the tests on the “badâ€� front fender (THANK GOD). When the PC didn’t do the trick, I figured, let’s go at it with a very very mild rotary setup. I took out a white waffle pad, SMR, and set the machine around 1200. I put the pad down, turned the machine on, and within seconds I saw no more white. HOW COULD THIS BE? I thought maybe the very little bit of heat caused the clear to discolor? The oval of missing white revealed a yellowish undercoat, but that was still very shiny. What is going on here? I wasn’t sure if I had actually burned through or not, but after some other tests in the same area, I confirmed that the white paint was gone. I was looking at shiny primer.
A few things to discuss here. First, has anyone ever seen paint that was SO thin, that you could virtually never bring a rotary near it no matter what pad, speed, or chemical? Second, I have been trying to verify if my paint is BC/CC or single-stage for days now to no avail. I didn’t see any paint transfer, so I am 99% sure that the application is BC/CC, but I don’t see how in God’s name this paint is so thin. Lastly, does anyone have any tips on how to get rid of the darn glue from the pinstripes without damaging this ever so thin paint I have on this car? I am afraid to even PC it now. The car is obviously white so it hides a lot, but it is clearly swirled beyond belief and I’d like to fix the spider/swirls/RIDS before sealing it. I’d rather not just fill it all in with a glaze. If anyone has any questions, comments, suggestions, or similar run-ins with Honda paint, I am all ears. I already removed the fender and will be re-spraying it shortly. Now if I can manage to just keep that VIN tag on there and pull a fast one!
- Louis
Hey guys,
As I don’t post here very often, I do come back time to time to continually learn about the best detailing practices, and sometimes, I’m fortunate to learn from others mistakes.
I’m posting here today to hopefully save someone else from creating the catastrophe that I created yesterday. A little bit about my background: I’m 30 years old and have always kept all of my vehicles in excellent shape from the beginning of my car owning days. I discovered Autopia a few years back, and picked up a PC, Zaino, rotary, among other things. I have detailed other peoples cars for compensation, and consider myself to be pretty knowledgeable when it comes to paint care/restoration. I have even done quite a bit of body work and painted one of my last cars with a bare metal, BC/CC job from the ground up.
So, about 2 weeks ago I purchased a nice low mileage 2004 Honda S2000. The color is Grand Prix White (NH565). I live in Connecticut but purchased the car while down in Florida on business and had it shipped up. Upon arrival, I discovered that one of the front fenders had been off in the past… HOW did I miss that when I looked the car over? No idea. Anyway, I concluded that the fender never had paintwork done. It was most likely loosened or removed for PDR, as there was a wavy dent toward the front of the fender. Not a huge deal. I figured I’d either buy a brand new fender, or fix this one off of the car and paint it. The other part to this story is that the car came with original pinstripes from the dealer (adhesive). Why on earth anyone would put pinstripes on a sports car is beside me, but as you guessed, they were the first thing to begin my detailing process on the car this weekend to get it all shined up for the spring/summer. I began the detail with a couple of Dawn washes, and then spent 4-5 hours claying every square inch of the cars paint. By this time, I had peeled the pinstripes all off, but they did leave plenty of glue residue behind. The claying itself would take a LITTLE of the glue with it every once in a while, but by no means was it going to do the job. I then stepped up to some adhesive removers and various products like a citrus bug/tar remover to no avail. I then went and got my PC out with a white pad and some SMR. Nothing but a shinier fender. Something to note here is that I was doing the tests on the “badâ€� front fender (THANK GOD). When the PC didn’t do the trick, I figured, let’s go at it with a very very mild rotary setup. I took out a white waffle pad, SMR, and set the machine around 1200. I put the pad down, turned the machine on, and within seconds I saw no more white. HOW COULD THIS BE? I thought maybe the very little bit of heat caused the clear to discolor? The oval of missing white revealed a yellowish undercoat, but that was still very shiny. What is going on here? I wasn’t sure if I had actually burned through or not, but after some other tests in the same area, I confirmed that the white paint was gone. I was looking at shiny primer.
A few things to discuss here. First, has anyone ever seen paint that was SO thin, that you could virtually never bring a rotary near it no matter what pad, speed, or chemical? Second, I have been trying to verify if my paint is BC/CC or single-stage for days now to no avail. I didn’t see any paint transfer, so I am 99% sure that the application is BC/CC, but I don’t see how in God’s name this paint is so thin. Lastly, does anyone have any tips on how to get rid of the darn glue from the pinstripes without damaging this ever so thin paint I have on this car? I am afraid to even PC it now. The car is obviously white so it hides a lot, but it is clearly swirled beyond belief and I’d like to fix the spider/swirls/RIDS before sealing it. I’d rather not just fill it all in with a glaze. If anyone has any questions, comments, suggestions, or similar run-ins with Honda paint, I am all ears. I already removed the fender and will be re-spraying it shortly. Now if I can manage to just keep that VIN tag on there and pull a fast one!
- Louis