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MDRX8 said:No car detailing is worth the loose of the clearcoat in order to remove orange peel. I'd bet a very high % of all cars have orange peel. Regards
Orange peel hides the defects on the actual metal of the body panel itself, if you were to take it off, you would see dings, waves, valleys, all the defects that came from the factory. Orange peel is just an easy way to hide it, so that's what they do.
Flashtime said:Where are you getting this information?
mborner said:Absolutely not! Factory clear, especially on new Toyota's, is unbelievably thin and the risk of damage is assured. Even if you managed to wet sand all the orange peel out without going through the clear, you would still be left with a clear coat that would be much too thin to protect the paint. Premature clear coat failure would be your end result.
I tend to think orange peel is a "byproduct" of the factory painting process - not an intentional goal to hide defects of stamped/formed sheet metal. Just my opinion.
David Fermani said:I'll be putting this theory to the test soon with my next new car. I'll be removing a substantial amount of factory clear (more than 1/2 mil) and will be washing regularly with Dawn. It will also be parked outside 24/7 in the hot S. FL sun. We'll see how long before failure will set in??
David Fermani said:I'll be putting this theory to the test soon with my next new car. I'll be removing a substantial amount of factory clear (more than 1/2 mil) and will be washing regularly with Dawn. It will also be parked outside 24/7 in the hot S. FL sun. We'll see how long before failure will set in??
efnfast said:Why bother? I mean yea, it's a really neat idea that will net you 5seconds of internet fame, but other than that, it's a lot of work for something that won't change what you or anybody else does.
Darkstar752 said:Orange peel hides the defects on the actual metal of the body panel itself, if you were to take it off, you would see dings, waves, valleys, all the defects that came from the factory. Orange peel is just an easy way to hide it, so that's what they do.
jpochile said:This is a very interesting subject :
I tend to agree with David regarding clear removal and paint failure .
Since I discover this site some time ago I was eager to try what I was learning and the ton of product that I was adquiring at a very rapid rate . So my 94 Toyota 4x4 pickup was my learning board(have 3 other cars) . I have buff it so many times trying different products , different foams and different machines that in some panels you can clearly see the primer . That was 2 1/2years ago and until today no paint failure yet . Here in Chile (Santiago)we have some nasty pollution in winter and from November until late May sun in the low to mid 90´s . My truck sits outside 24/7 . I only drive it maybe once every 10 days .
I thought for sure the paint would fail . To my surprise it has not . I can tell you guys the hood aerea is 100% free of clear . Actually looks really good .
I will repaint the truck in November just because I will give it to my son .:xyxthumbs
I hope this makes some sense .
Cheers , Jean Paul