My first client! - Reflex Silver Jetta + Opti-Coat

Gray_Panther

New member
Hello all,



A good friend of mine recently purchased a new VW Jetta. He knows about my side business that I have started and he came to me after telling him about Opti-Coat. He was interested in the product and scheduled a date to work on his car. Unfortunately, before the day of the detail, a scuff was found on his front bumper. Not sure how it got there, but he wanted it gone.



Onto the products used:

800 grit 3M sandpaper

ONR

Meg's clay with ONR as clay lube

Adam's APC for the tires

PC 7424XP

Meg's Cutting Pad

Meg's Polishing Pad

Meg's #105

Meg's #205

IPA Solution

Opti-Coat 2.0



Detail Process:



He was kind enough to take it to a touch-less car wash to wash away all the salt. So I decided to not bring out my foam gun and went ahead with an ONR wash. This is how it looked when it arrived.

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The scuff

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Even though the car is new, the door jambs would need attention

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After washing the exterior and cleaning the mud-flaps, I began claying the whole exterior. The good news is that this car was shipped with the plastic wraps and removed upon arrival at the dealer. The clay was pretty clean besides some embedded grit and dirt. It's a great practice for car companies to ship their automobiles in such a manner.



Here is the clay before

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And after

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I then cleaned up the door jambs

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After that was done, I finally turned my attention to the major defect. This was actually my first time wet-sanding so I was extremely cautious. I tried compounding the defect first with #105 but I didn't do much as expected.



I let the sandpaper soak in clean water for a couple hour and used my ONR clay lube to keep the defected area lubricated. I used a single motion technique where I applied the least amount of pressure and kept the direction of my passes the same. I forgot to take pictures of the process because I was so much in the zone that I didn't want to break concentration.



After wet-sanding, the paint was cloudy but level. I then took my trusty PC with #105 and began compounding. It was to my relief that after compounding I could clearly see the reflection of my hand again. What a relief! I then polished it down with #205 and my polishing pad. I then examined the rest of the car and polished out some of the swirls that were present. To my surprise it was kept in great condition.



I then did an IPA wipedown and began Opti-Coating. It was my first time using this product, so I made sure I did as much research and watched as many videos as I could to get the best understanding possible before putting theory into practice. I was surprised at how easy it was to apply and it took me about an hour to do the whole car. Here are the after pictures:



The scuff is gone!

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Afterwards, I picked up my first client and drove him back. I made sure I drove up slowly to his car because I knew the anticipation about the outcome of the scuff was killing him inside :). I am evil. He had the biggest look of surprise on his face when he could not find it. We did a walk-around and he couldn't stop commenting on how glossy it looked.

We went out for drinks later that night and he told me his parent's looked at my work and said "Autos einai filos," which the English translation from Greek is, "Now this is a friend." It really touched me and I took great pride in that statement.



Thanks for reading!
 
That looks fantastic, but did you really use only 800 grip sandpaper, or did I miss something? In the future, try working your way up to at least 2000 grit (in fact, you may not need to get any more aggressive than 2000 or 1500.) The sanding marks will come out MUCH easier.
 
Applehugger said:
That looks fantastic, but did you really use only 800 grip sandpaper, or did I miss something? In the future, try working your way up to at least 2000 grit (in fact, you may not need to get any more aggressive than 2000 or 1500.) The sanding marks will come out MUCH easier.



You know i was reading the same thing on a topic the night prior. For whatever reason (probably lack of sleep) i went to an auto detailing store that is local and they recommended 800 grit because Megs #105 is 1200 grit. It totally slipped my mind up until now and when I got the sandpaper I thought i was making a logical choice.



Thank you for reminding me. I have never wetsanded before. Do I count myself lucky that I used the lightest pressure possible and was able to compound it out?
 
Gray_Panther said:
You know i was reading the same thing on a topic the night prior. For whatever reason (probably lack of sleep) i went to an auto detailing store that is local and they recommended 800 grit because Megs #105 is 1200 grit. It totally slipped my mind up until now and when I got the sandpaper I thought i was making a logical choice.



Thank you for reminding me. I have never wetsanded before. Do I count myself lucky that I used the lightest pressure possible and was able to compound it out?



Yes, you do lol. 800 grit is REALLY aggressive, and I've never had a situation where I need to get that aggressive on paint. The only thing I use grits below 1000 for is restoring highly oxidized headlamps. Most of the time I prefer to start with 2500 grit, and work backwards if necessary. But hey, the car looks great, so don't sweat it. Just pick up various grits of sandpaper for next time.
 
Applehugger said:
Yes, you do lol. 800 grit is REALLY aggressive, and I've never had a situation where I need to get that aggressive on paint. The only thing I use grits below 1000 for is restoring highly oxidized headlamps. Most of the time I prefer to start with 2500 grit, and work backwards if necessary. But hey, the car looks great, so don't sweat it. Just pick up various grits of sandpaper for next time.



Thanks! When I wetsand an area on my GTI i will be sure to grab some. The engineer in me,for logic's sake, wants to know why wetsand at 2500 grit when megs #105 cuts 1200 grit scratches?
 
Gray_Panther said:
Thanks! When I wetsand an area on my GTI i will be sure to grab some. The engineer in me,for logic's sake, wants to know why wetsand at 2500 grit when megs #105 cuts 1200 grit scratches?



There are several reasons, some searching may provide more comprehensive answers:

1. Wetsanding removes less clearcoat than compounding (when done properly,) because it is much more precise than running a buffer over a much larger area.

2. It's often faster to wetsand out a scratch and then remove the sanding marks than it is to make multiple compounding passes to try and remove a scratch/scuff.

3. It is almost impossible to level paint (remove orange peel or other imperfections) without wetsanding.
 
Hah, I used 1000 grit the other day on a tail gait for a work truck that I primered, painted, clear coated, and then sanded/polished and I thought I was being VERY aggressive. lol



I knew I had a lot of coats of clear so I wasn't too worried, but 800 is pretty wild on factory paint and clear.



Great job on the car!



:edit: The poster above me nailed the big reason I wet sand with finer and finer paper on a car with a nice finish. Wet sanding may remove 1-2 micros of clear with ~1500-2000 grit paper. Compounding with something like an MF cutting pad and a compound can easily remove 5-6 microns. I get better results wet sanding each step by hand until I get to 3000 grit paper which I'll throw on my PC7424 backing plate.
 
Oh boy, I feel stupid now. That one moment of laziness at the auto store could have cost me a lot. The work is done, and thankfully it came out looking good. Thanks for the input guys, I now know better.
 
Looks great!

We have two similar cars. I've been avoiding the upper (gloss black) grilles, other than a wash or ONR. They seem like they will be damaged easily.

Just wondering what you encountered on that section of this car.
 
Concourswanna b said:
Looks great!

We have two similar cars. I've been avoiding the upper (gloss black) grilles, other than a wash or ONR. They seem like they will be damaged easily.

Just wondering what you encountered on that section of this car.



Yes, good question. The gloss black pillars and the grill had defects. One defect was noticeable, it looked like a bird bomb hit it and let it sit for a some days. It needed to be hit with #105, after that was leveled out, there still remained all the micro-swirls on those gloss black areas. I actually had to use some #205 with my PC on the pillars, and a cut up polish pad (half the circumference of a hockey puck) with #205 to polish out the micro-swirls on the grill. After a full IPA wipedown, I coated everything with Opti-Coat.
 
Gray_Panther said:
Yes, good question. The gloss black pillars and the grill had defects. One defect was noticeable, it looked like a bird bomb hit it and let it sit for a some days. It needed to be hit with #105, after that was leveled out, there still remained all the micro-swirls on those gloss black areas. I actually had to use some #205 with my PC on the pillars, and a cut up polish pad (half the circumference of a hockey puck) with #205 to polish out the micro-swirls on the grill. After a full IPA wipedown, I coated everything with Opti-Coat.



Well, if the grill responded pretty well to 205, that's good news. I've been scared to polish out that area. Our pillars came dealership-swirled, so I still have to work on those. These cars are turning out to be great little vehicles though.
 
Concourswanna b said:
Well, if the grill responded pretty well to 205, that's good news. I've been scared to polish out that area. Our pillars came dealership-swirled, so I still have to work on those. These cars are turning out to be great little vehicles though.



Yes I was really impressed with the interior. My customer's car came with the leatherette and in upstate NY cold, i was surprised at how quickly the seats warmed up even though he didn't have seat warmers.



Yes but be wary when removing the polish as it is easy to micro-mar. Tricky business, but it will respond well.
 
BigDreZ28 said:
My buddy bought one then three weeks later went back and got the gli ...really nice interior in those cars



Yeah, the GLI is next on my list. We needed two cars when we bought ours, so we needed to keep the costs down a little, but when I trade mine in it will be for a black Autobahn version for sure.
 
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