imported_Dave KG
New member
An early start todau, up a 6am, and get ready and met up with Bryan at 7am for the drive through to detail this lovely car - a metallic black Porsche 911 GT3.
The car on arrival looked pretty clean:

A quick discussion with the owner revealed that he uses the two-bucket method and a washmitt when washing the car, os the correct care regimes were in place. :thumb:
First off, Bryan cleaned the wheels are arches. Wheel were cleaned first with Meguiars APC and then with Chemical Guys Blue Rim Cleaner. They were then rinsed with the Karcher and dried. The arches were cleaned and then dressed with Autoglym Vinyl & Rubber Care. Once complete it was onto the bodywork.
First off, this was foamed with Autoglym Powermax3 TFR:

Then this was rinsed off, and then the car washed using the two bucket method with Autobrite Luxury Suds and dried off with a meguiars Water Magnet using Meguiars Last Touch as a lube.
Assessing the paint for bonded contaminants revealed there was very little there - clearly this car was well cared for and lived in a garage, as only mild contamination was there. So, we clayed the car using Sonus Green UltraFine Clay with Meguiars Last Touch as the clay lube.
Once clayed we could then asses the condition of the paint. The first thing that became immediately obvious was a large area of hologramming on the driver's side rear-three-quarter, clearly the result of previous machine polishing at come point. Under the Brinkmann the hologramming was clear to see, and fairly severe as hologramming goes:


and it was clear in the sunlight which was how I first spotted it:

However, across the rest of the car, the excellent care regime in place was proving to be effective, only very mild isolated swilrs on the car, which may well have been dealer inflicted when the car was new...


Given the lightness of the swirls, I first of all decided to try out a light abrasive combination on a test spot. Porsche paint, like other German paints, has a reputation for being hard but I always believe in working up through the abrasive levels on a test spot to make sure you sont end up removing more paint than is necessary. So, I trialled on Menzerna Final Finish PO106FF on a Meguiars W8006 polishing pad, applied using the Makits 9227 rotary. Spread at 600rpm, two passes at 1200rpm and then eight to ten passes (yes, that many! thoroughly break the polish down) at 1500rpm before making two final passes at 900rpm to refine the finish. The result:
The car on arrival looked pretty clean:

A quick discussion with the owner revealed that he uses the two-bucket method and a washmitt when washing the car, os the correct care regimes were in place. :thumb:
First off, Bryan cleaned the wheels are arches. Wheel were cleaned first with Meguiars APC and then with Chemical Guys Blue Rim Cleaner. They were then rinsed with the Karcher and dried. The arches were cleaned and then dressed with Autoglym Vinyl & Rubber Care. Once complete it was onto the bodywork.
First off, this was foamed with Autoglym Powermax3 TFR:

Then this was rinsed off, and then the car washed using the two bucket method with Autobrite Luxury Suds and dried off with a meguiars Water Magnet using Meguiars Last Touch as a lube.
Assessing the paint for bonded contaminants revealed there was very little there - clearly this car was well cared for and lived in a garage, as only mild contamination was there. So, we clayed the car using Sonus Green UltraFine Clay with Meguiars Last Touch as the clay lube.
Once clayed we could then asses the condition of the paint. The first thing that became immediately obvious was a large area of hologramming on the driver's side rear-three-quarter, clearly the result of previous machine polishing at come point. Under the Brinkmann the hologramming was clear to see, and fairly severe as hologramming goes:


and it was clear in the sunlight which was how I first spotted it:

However, across the rest of the car, the excellent care regime in place was proving to be effective, only very mild isolated swilrs on the car, which may well have been dealer inflicted when the car was new...


Given the lightness of the swirls, I first of all decided to try out a light abrasive combination on a test spot. Porsche paint, like other German paints, has a reputation for being hard but I always believe in working up through the abrasive levels on a test spot to make sure you sont end up removing more paint than is necessary. So, I trialled on Menzerna Final Finish PO106FF on a Meguiars W8006 polishing pad, applied using the Makits 9227 rotary. Spread at 600rpm, two passes at 1200rpm and then eight to ten passes (yes, that many! thoroughly break the polish down) at 1500rpm before making two final passes at 900rpm to refine the finish. The result: