EXPDetailing
New member
To one-step it so quickly maybe he uses a mixture of shampoo, Klasse AIO, and a liquid wax in his pressure washer. ��
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
You already know the answer, no that doesn't make sense. I agree with everyone, let him work for nothing. I really would lick to see a picture of some of his work. That warm water stuff is loco and sandblasting the clay off, ludicrous. Does he also clean the windshield with spit and his shirtsleeve?lol
I call for a "Detail Off"
Challenge him in front of the entire Staff
Two equally deplorable cars
You both get 7 hours to do your best
I suggest holding it on a Friday in the parking lot
Live actually got a pending detail job from a coworker... 94 Mercedes s420. Black. Paint is absolutely trashed. Did a test spot on the hood this evening to make sure the paint is salvageable. I wanna see it in the sunlight tomorrow. The turnaround I do on that car would be huge advertising.
Sometimes 'old school' is good...very good. I grew up in the days of Ozzie and Harriet Nelson. It was a simpler time with higher values. We never had to lock our doors. Cars would sit in the driveway with the keys in the ignition...
But sometimes we get set in our ways. We do things the way we always did*. (I remember [chuckles] in my teens my 'old school' boss at the restaurant had me washing windows with vinegar and newspaper). Really 'old school' won't buy something if something already around the house will do. Need soap to wash the car, there's dish soap. Need to clean fabric, there's laundry soap. Need to clean carpet...same as the carpet in the house...sometimes valid, sometimes not.
(* "If you always do what you always did, you always get what you always got.")
I can honestly say when I came here all those years ago ('06 or so) I didn't know about clay, no rinse, polishing...But you gotta go someplace to learn what you never knew growing up.
I met an 'old school' professional detailer this spring working at one of the local detail shops. He said he's been doing it all his life. (I think this shop is more of a glorified car wash place). George (not his real name) is a nice guy, but not very educated and I doubt he's ever used a computer. I told him I got into detailing with my last ride and I mentioned Optimum No Rinse to him among other things. He said he never heard of it. Well, you don't know what you know till you know it.
It's all a matter of perspective. Aren't we lucky to know what we think we know and come hear to learn what we don't?!!!
Good luck with the Mercedes..
They all have beautiful paintwork, but being its black, you are going to have to be really focused and not make work for yourself, ok ?
It it's as you said - trashed - I dont know how you can do an entire Black vehicle quickly...
It all has to be as clear and glossy as possible, panel to panel, if this is what you and the Client agreed upon..
Good luck ! You can do this !
Dan F
Just saw a car he did today. Swirl marks in it. Black car but it looks blue. Buy cheap, get cheap.
Oh and he used turtle wax ice and thinks its gonna last a year... lol
Swirl marks, what a surprise, if you only take 7 hrs to do a complete detail, well, that's what you get, as you and we all know..
Black car that looks blue in a BMW is called Carbon Black, a beautiful color..
Dan F
Dan F
"Experience" in any profession IMO doesn't mean anything to me unless you can show me that you know what you're doing. You can do any job for 25 years, don't automatically mean you've been doing it right the whole time. Guys like this are a perfect example, as are many of the guys with experience in my full time job as amechanic.
As for the whole 7 hours to do a car... I've had a few cars where I did inside and out with a quick one step(3 medium speed passes/section w/ HD Speed) in about that amount of time. Most of my clients just want something shiny when I give the car back. Is it the autopian level of detail we see from many people here? Absolutely not, but it's what the customer is happy with and willing to pay for. My rate is based on about $25/hr and I quote jobs accordingly and make sure the owner knows exactly what will be done to their car before I start.
The detailing business can be tough and sometimes annoying. I have had a few clients question my prices based upon what another shop nearby offers for details. All I tell them is you typically get what you pay for. If you're paying for a bumper to bumper detail inside and out with a "3 step paint polishing process" all for $160, odds are you aren't getting very quality work.
My advice as others have said, see if you can steal one of his jobs from a co worker you know, and knock the detail out of the park. Those who see the difference and care enough will come to you. The others who are happy with their $60 vac n buff, let them go. It's business you don't want to get into
Wow! That is trashed! Is that a clean surface on the unpolished areas?
Great results with the correction!