citizen arcane
New member
I work at a refinery (yup one that provides your gasoline and heating oil among other products) went to my car when I knocked off and found it covered in oil. There was a release of what appears to be a medium crude that "rained" on the facility - including my car.
After running it through the coin wash I assessed the damage and it appears as described, medium brown oil that appears to be a "spray". Using the knowledge that lighter oils will remove heavier ones I used WD 40 on the windshield then washed down w/ car wash to good effect then did a test spot on the paint with good results.
Question is: is there a better method than WD 40/car detergent/clay/polish?
Please enlighten me.
OH.......and please no discussion of them hiring this out as the last time this happened the facility totally ruined the finish - so their suggested solution won't fly w/ me. I do intend to bring the car to a few body shops to get their recommendations as to whether the paint is trashed before proceeding. So I guess I'm really collecting data here in case I do it myself. For the record I have a PC and Flex, pads and a few polishes on hand.
After running it through the coin wash I assessed the damage and it appears as described, medium brown oil that appears to be a "spray". Using the knowledge that lighter oils will remove heavier ones I used WD 40 on the windshield then washed down w/ car wash to good effect then did a test spot on the paint with good results.
Question is: is there a better method than WD 40/car detergent/clay/polish?
Please enlighten me.
OH.......and please no discussion of them hiring this out as the last time this happened the facility totally ruined the finish - so their suggested solution won't fly w/ me. I do intend to bring the car to a few body shops to get their recommendations as to whether the paint is trashed before proceeding. So I guess I'm really collecting data here in case I do it myself. For the record I have a PC and Flex, pads and a few polishes on hand.