pasadena_commut
New member
My daughter's Mazda Protege's hood is not shiny. The car is dark blue but the hood looks like it is dirty, even though it is not, and has no shine to it. It also does not feel smooth, sort of like a clean chalkboard or 2000 grit sandpaper. There is no overt peeling of the clear coat. This state of affairs may be the result of a severe episode of overheating - suffice it to say that the radiator blew up and the overflow tank melted. ([Some] girls and cars, need I say more? )
Anyway, today I tried to wax the hood, to see if it would make things look better. Oh boy, it did not. The car was washed, dried, and paste Turtle wax spread with a damp foam applicator. I then let it set about 10 minutes while one of the headlights that needed sanding was masked off. This was at 5:00 PM, in the shade. Then the wax was wiped off with some old cotton diapers. This is how the car has been waxed many times before with no problems at all. This time, the wax came off, but the hood looks like it is still on. That is, run a hand across the hood and it feels smooth with no variations in drag or any bumps, yet I can still see a pattern corresponding to how the wax was applied. The leading edge of the hood looks normal, as do the places the wax extended out onto the fenders, which wiped clean. Conversely, all the areas that looked "dirty" before have a wax pattern.
What is going on here? My best guess is that the clear coat and maybe the paint under it is riddled with tiny cracks, so that when the wax went on, it penetrated into these cracks, and that is the pattern I am seeing now. But that doesn't seem like it would be the whole story, since there was plenty of wax to pack all of the cracks, so no particular reason there should be a pattern. I'm not explaining that well. Imagine a field of ice cube trays on which dirt is dumped to various depths - scrape off the dirt and all the trays would be filled, regardless of the original pattern. By analogy the whole hood should maybe be whiter than before, but not patterned on a hand motion size scale.
The best thing to do would be to repaint the hood. For a variety of reasons, that isn't happening any time soon. Is there some way to make this situation a little better? The goal is to end with a layer of wax on the hood, but not have the hood look like wax was applied and never wiped off.
Things tried so far:
1. lots of elbow grease with a clean cotton diaper
2. a bit of water and more elbow grease with a clean cotton diaper
The first made no difference at all, the second made a very slight improvement, but only just a little, and then nothing more changed. Then the sun went down and it was too dark to do anything more today.
Suggestions? Thanks.
Anyway, today I tried to wax the hood, to see if it would make things look better. Oh boy, it did not. The car was washed, dried, and paste Turtle wax spread with a damp foam applicator. I then let it set about 10 minutes while one of the headlights that needed sanding was masked off. This was at 5:00 PM, in the shade. Then the wax was wiped off with some old cotton diapers. This is how the car has been waxed many times before with no problems at all. This time, the wax came off, but the hood looks like it is still on. That is, run a hand across the hood and it feels smooth with no variations in drag or any bumps, yet I can still see a pattern corresponding to how the wax was applied. The leading edge of the hood looks normal, as do the places the wax extended out onto the fenders, which wiped clean. Conversely, all the areas that looked "dirty" before have a wax pattern.
What is going on here? My best guess is that the clear coat and maybe the paint under it is riddled with tiny cracks, so that when the wax went on, it penetrated into these cracks, and that is the pattern I am seeing now. But that doesn't seem like it would be the whole story, since there was plenty of wax to pack all of the cracks, so no particular reason there should be a pattern. I'm not explaining that well. Imagine a field of ice cube trays on which dirt is dumped to various depths - scrape off the dirt and all the trays would be filled, regardless of the original pattern. By analogy the whole hood should maybe be whiter than before, but not patterned on a hand motion size scale.
The best thing to do would be to repaint the hood. For a variety of reasons, that isn't happening any time soon. Is there some way to make this situation a little better? The goal is to end with a layer of wax on the hood, but not have the hood look like wax was applied and never wiped off.
Things tried so far:
1. lots of elbow grease with a clean cotton diaper
2. a bit of water and more elbow grease with a clean cotton diaper
The first made no difference at all, the second made a very slight improvement, but only just a little, and then nothing more changed. Then the sun went down and it was too dark to do anything more today.
Suggestions? Thanks.