...and man am I TIRED!
First off, I gotta hand it to you guys that do this detailing for a living. This is some hard work! Physically demanding doing all that pressing, rubbing, wiping, spraying, sweating....hats off to you!
I just went 13 hours straight working on my car. About 19 hours total, if you include the washing, drying, claying and taping.
So, after the prep was done, I started in on the compounding. M105 ultra cut compound and Lake Country Orange pad. Mist black baron, X the pad and work it in with my fingers.
Apply my pea sized drops of compound and get to work. I dont know if I did something wrong, but it never hazed up. The biggest problem I had is that it seemed that as soon as I started in with my PC and the compound, it dried out very quickly. I mean like sometimes after about 2 passes I could see the paint underneath. I dont know if I had too much wetness on my pad, not enough compound..I dont know...but I would just buff til I felt that I needed to stop, wipe clean with a microfiber, then spray some M34 and wipe it clean, then go back with a dry microfiber and wipe up any streaks.
Did this on the whole car.
Changed to the white Lake Country pad, grabbed my M205 and a clean microfiber. Wipe the area that I am going to polish so there is no dust or compound residue. Primed pad with the same method that I did with the orange pads, applied polish the same way...and buffed the same way. However, I guess this stuff stays wetter longer...or it could be that the orange pads are not dimpled...and the white ones are..maybe that had something to do with it. So, I started in with the polishing.
Now...I did learn a good lesson in all this...make SURE the next time I do this, I have a couple days off!!! Trying to do a car in a day and a half is rough...but I didnt have much time and wanted to at least get one coat of wet diamond on before I had to go back to work. As such, I found that I became less and less concerned with correction and more concerned with just getting done! I tried to put ample time on each section..but I didnt buff the polish til it was powder, or til it started to disappear. I basically buffed each section for about 2-3 minutes...until the polish was very thin. Once done, I just wiped clean with a microfiber (didnt use M34 when polishing).
So..got that done. Pulled all the tape off (the tape left glue on the car..but it was pretty easy to get off). Pulled the car outside and gave it a good washing and drying.
Pulled back inside and grabbed the foam applicator and bottle of wet diamond...I think I put it on kinda thick...but it was manageable. I applied WD to the entire car...then went back with microfiber and buffed it all off. (next time I think I may do one or two sections, then buff it off). Now when buffing it off, it was at night so I was using a halogen lamp to see...one thing I noticed is that there seemed to be a film left after buffing it off..kind of like an oily film..or something that it seemed no matter how hard I tried, I could not get that to go away...so I got it as good as I could.
Anyway...that is one coat of WD...waiting til the morning for it to cure, then i'll add a second coat.
Here are some pics..they dont do the car justice as it is night and only have the garage flourescent light and the halogen lamp...once I put the second coat on tomorrow, ill pull it outside and get some natural sunlight pics:
Left Door
Right Rear
Left Rear
Top
Question...after you apply WD, is the car driveable right away or do you need to let it cure for 8 hours before you drive it?
Oh, another question, if you get some compound or polish on the black trim, is this bad for it or does it just discolor it? Can I use some plastic cleaner to clean it, and then some back to black to finish it?
another question! what are the compound and polish supposed to look like when you have worked it enough? are you supposed to work it until it looks like there is none left...like you are buffing the bare surface...or just buff til it's just transparent? If you see powder coming out, does this mean you have worked it too long? Several times during the compounding stage, I did notice some powder..but I hadn't been working it that long before I seen it.
First off, I gotta hand it to you guys that do this detailing for a living. This is some hard work! Physically demanding doing all that pressing, rubbing, wiping, spraying, sweating....hats off to you!
I just went 13 hours straight working on my car. About 19 hours total, if you include the washing, drying, claying and taping.
So, after the prep was done, I started in on the compounding. M105 ultra cut compound and Lake Country Orange pad. Mist black baron, X the pad and work it in with my fingers.
Apply my pea sized drops of compound and get to work. I dont know if I did something wrong, but it never hazed up. The biggest problem I had is that it seemed that as soon as I started in with my PC and the compound, it dried out very quickly. I mean like sometimes after about 2 passes I could see the paint underneath. I dont know if I had too much wetness on my pad, not enough compound..I dont know...but I would just buff til I felt that I needed to stop, wipe clean with a microfiber, then spray some M34 and wipe it clean, then go back with a dry microfiber and wipe up any streaks.
Did this on the whole car.
Changed to the white Lake Country pad, grabbed my M205 and a clean microfiber. Wipe the area that I am going to polish so there is no dust or compound residue. Primed pad with the same method that I did with the orange pads, applied polish the same way...and buffed the same way. However, I guess this stuff stays wetter longer...or it could be that the orange pads are not dimpled...and the white ones are..maybe that had something to do with it. So, I started in with the polishing.
Now...I did learn a good lesson in all this...make SURE the next time I do this, I have a couple days off!!! Trying to do a car in a day and a half is rough...but I didnt have much time and wanted to at least get one coat of wet diamond on before I had to go back to work. As such, I found that I became less and less concerned with correction and more concerned with just getting done! I tried to put ample time on each section..but I didnt buff the polish til it was powder, or til it started to disappear. I basically buffed each section for about 2-3 minutes...until the polish was very thin. Once done, I just wiped clean with a microfiber (didnt use M34 when polishing).
So..got that done. Pulled all the tape off (the tape left glue on the car..but it was pretty easy to get off). Pulled the car outside and gave it a good washing and drying.
Pulled back inside and grabbed the foam applicator and bottle of wet diamond...I think I put it on kinda thick...but it was manageable. I applied WD to the entire car...then went back with microfiber and buffed it all off. (next time I think I may do one or two sections, then buff it off). Now when buffing it off, it was at night so I was using a halogen lamp to see...one thing I noticed is that there seemed to be a film left after buffing it off..kind of like an oily film..or something that it seemed no matter how hard I tried, I could not get that to go away...so I got it as good as I could.
Anyway...that is one coat of WD...waiting til the morning for it to cure, then i'll add a second coat.
Here are some pics..they dont do the car justice as it is night and only have the garage flourescent light and the halogen lamp...once I put the second coat on tomorrow, ill pull it outside and get some natural sunlight pics:
Left Door

Right Rear

Left Rear

Top

Question...after you apply WD, is the car driveable right away or do you need to let it cure for 8 hours before you drive it?
Oh, another question, if you get some compound or polish on the black trim, is this bad for it or does it just discolor it? Can I use some plastic cleaner to clean it, and then some back to black to finish it?
another question! what are the compound and polish supposed to look like when you have worked it enough? are you supposed to work it until it looks like there is none left...like you are buffing the bare surface...or just buff til it's just transparent? If you see powder coming out, does this mean you have worked it too long? Several times during the compounding stage, I did notice some powder..but I hadn't been working it that long before I seen it.