Here is my predicament. I am not completely against wet sanding although I feel it should be a absolute last resort. Same with heavy compounding (M105-3M Extreme Cut). I tend to like to clay first and start with a white or orange LC pad and a mild polish and work my way up. Lately I have been raising the bar on my work and I have been taking in side jobs for extra cash. I have also flip cars from time to time and honestly, I know its a very poor attitude to have but I rather collect my $$ and let the next owner worry about paint thickness. I absolutely hates people who are always looking to repaint a dull finish or dump a car because it "doesn't look nice." Those are the cars I buy and resell
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Problems begin with the customers wanting more and more. I know what most of you guys are going to say... tell them its not possible... tell them the harm it does to heavy compound... but the problem is they will just go down the road to the local shop where the guys change oil while there detailing your car. And I do like to test my skills.
Lately I have been getting one bad acid etched car after another. This is a real problem. Every car has ridiculous acid etching. Last car I did was so bad after wet sanding and polishing with 3M extreme cut I still couldn't knock it down. Hood look good in direct sunlight but anywhere else it was still covered in bad etching. I feel like I am not delivering what these people expect but at the same time I am having a hard time swallowing the fact that I am really knocking down the clear coat. Whats particularly upsetting was I recently did a car that had rock hard clear on the hood, and soft paint towards the rear. My first time burning the clear, and you know what... I still couldn't get the freaking acid etching to go away.
What are your thoughts?
Give the customer what they want or provide a mediocre finish and save the clear?
Whats really amazing is the cars keeping getting worse and worse. Its like people wash them with brake fluid.
DG

Problems begin with the customers wanting more and more. I know what most of you guys are going to say... tell them its not possible... tell them the harm it does to heavy compound... but the problem is they will just go down the road to the local shop where the guys change oil while there detailing your car. And I do like to test my skills.
Lately I have been getting one bad acid etched car after another. This is a real problem. Every car has ridiculous acid etching. Last car I did was so bad after wet sanding and polishing with 3M extreme cut I still couldn't knock it down. Hood look good in direct sunlight but anywhere else it was still covered in bad etching. I feel like I am not delivering what these people expect but at the same time I am having a hard time swallowing the fact that I am really knocking down the clear coat. Whats particularly upsetting was I recently did a car that had rock hard clear on the hood, and soft paint towards the rear. My first time burning the clear, and you know what... I still couldn't get the freaking acid etching to go away.
What are your thoughts?
Give the customer what they want or provide a mediocre finish and save the clear?
Whats really amazing is the cars keeping getting worse and worse. Its like people wash them with brake fluid.
DG