joyriide1113
There is no cure!
Today i had a client drop off his car. trying to perfect his car as much as possible I noticed a small scratch and began to lightly wetsand it with 2000 grit. After sanding the area, I grabbed some extreme cut, OP, and a yellow cutting pad. I don't know what happened as I kept the buffer moving but for some reason, when i finished and wiped everything away, i realized I warped the paint.
This area was on the lip of the rear bumper, right where the trunk lid closes. The damage was not a rotory burn, but warping. It looked like a thumb print with a section of the paint peeled off. This was caused by too much heat obviously.
I immediately called the customer up, had him come by and look at. We then went straight to a bodyshop, got an estimate, dropped the car off, and then went and rented a car for him. His car will be ready by Thursday thankfully and it looks like it all worked out.
The reason I took care of this client soo well instead of just telling him to send me the bill, is because he is a return customer, good person who I have had good chats with, and part of another forum i frequent.
I feel completely foolish and will try never to make this mistake. I have been using a rotory alone without any other machine for 2 years now and have never had this problem. In fact, i had to purposely try to burn a finish before in order to understand what it was (beater car). I feel I took a responsible approach by taking care of it immediately but also question myself now.
Has anyone messed up liek this before? I literally feel like a rotory is a part of my hand since i always have great control over it, but this obviously showed me otherwise.
FLAME ON!
This area was on the lip of the rear bumper, right where the trunk lid closes. The damage was not a rotory burn, but warping. It looked like a thumb print with a section of the paint peeled off. This was caused by too much heat obviously.
I immediately called the customer up, had him come by and look at. We then went straight to a bodyshop, got an estimate, dropped the car off, and then went and rented a car for him. His car will be ready by Thursday thankfully and it looks like it all worked out.
The reason I took care of this client soo well instead of just telling him to send me the bill, is because he is a return customer, good person who I have had good chats with, and part of another forum i frequent.
I feel completely foolish and will try never to make this mistake. I have been using a rotory alone without any other machine for 2 years now and have never had this problem. In fact, i had to purposely try to burn a finish before in order to understand what it was (beater car). I feel I took a responsible approach by taking care of it immediately but also question myself now.
Has anyone messed up liek this before? I literally feel like a rotory is a part of my hand since i always have great control over it, but this obviously showed me otherwise.
FLAME ON!
