Wax Season Opener '06: '02 Chevy Camaro

lbls1

New member
I finally was able to steal some time away from work to launch my traditional start of the wax season with the required big clean. We decided to change the team line-up a bit this year by going with very mild polishes (cleaners and a finishing polish) via the pc, a light film seal via hand and my choice of wax. Here are the essential components:



'02 Camaro SS w/ GM Base-Clear Red Parrot (Sunset Orange) paint

Black-Magic Wet Shine Car Wash

Zymol HD-Cleanse

Sonus SFX-3

Sonus Paintwork Cleanser

PC set from 1-3.5; then 5-6



Clean-up w/ Sonus Acrylic Spritz

Sonus Acrylic Glanz: coated, neutralized and added a hint of gloss

Zymol Vintage

Hand applied clean-up, glaze and wax.



Rare behind the scenes shots (Might shock some of my club members lol!)

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Zero Wax Factor

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Easy area for swirl accumulation!

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Net Results

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More...

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increased light...

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Back to .... the garage!!

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I am satisfied so far with the start of the season, though I don't think that the wax is finished yet. At this stage of the detail, I like to see how the mating of this wax and the paint color translates. I will try to post a mid-season update, as I feel we are probably a session or two away from our element.



This is not a relaxing event, as a lot of us know. It does involve labor and patience. This is one of the reasons why I die for spring during the winter, the sight of fresh wax on the surface. It all becomes too real, though, after the hours and the aches...! Happy waxing everyone!!
 
Thanks guys!! Less clean-up this year too Scott!!!! Man you should've seen that gum left from that WHITE masking tape last year!!!!! We keep learning with every detail challenge though; that's what adds to the fun factor.
 
I take it the next several times you wash your car, you will also be adding more wax, eh? I just did a heavy clean-up on mine this week, so far I have CMW and Souveran on it. Probably a few layers of Carnauba Jett next and top with Natty's Blue. :)
 
Wash.......what's that?? lol!!! I know what you mean though..lol!!! Probably the next time I will see the car it will get a coat. I will probably put a carnauba spritz on it the next session after it to control the "fat" factor. With carnaubas, you have to take it slow.....too much too soon will leave you greasy and uncomposed IMO.



Edit...let me add the wash ingredient....no way I could've started without that!
 
lbls1 said:
I will probably put a carnauba spritz on it the next session after it to control the "fat" factor. With carnaubas, you have to take it slow.....too much too soon will leave you greasy and uncomposed IMO.



Agreed.



Probably hit mine with wax every 2nd or 3rd wash. Must be a wash too, not just a QD or you can get smearing and hazing in the sun. Space the carnauba applications right though, and your paint ends up a mile deep!
 
Just out of curiousity is the order you actually performed the steps the same as you have them listed? I follow a similar spring clean up regimen and I always use HD-Cleanse immediately before applying the wax. It seems to add to the slickness of the finish.



Also, how do you like the Vintage? I recall in another thread you mentioned you hadn't used it before. It certainly looks like it gave your paint a REALLY wet look which is exactly what it does for me as well. I also find it makes the metal flake pop nicely.
 
Thanks everybody.



Scott, to be honest, this car doesn't get washed too often, and that may be due to the fact that it stays couped up a lot. I haven't had problems smearing with my qd's when accumulating a build up though. If I see that there is either too much dusting or some dirt in places, then it gets washed. Now my daily driver, that's different. It gets washed every week without fail because it gets compound dirt and dust....that one has to get a bath. I also want to be careful with the qd's this time (I haven't really abused them on car #1 though). I want to space out the layers and make certain that it gets qd's every third and if I accumulate more than 6 layers (not sure if Vintage will need it), then a qd every other layer.



Mikeyc, I believe that the order was exactly what I proceeded with. I started with Zymol's hd cleanse so as to strip the wax off before doing the isolated polish. HD Cleanse I found to be effective, but it did clump a bit when working it a while with the pc (base white pad). It smelled nice too, like chocolate milk! Leave it to Zymol to add effect.



I still desired some mechanical polishing, but since I judged the paint to be in relatively good shape, I decided to work with a very mild polish, and work it in stages. Sonus' polishes I've found to be very effective, as they are not necessarily the most aggressive polishes, but they will effectively take out swirls and correct paint with the right speed and patience (sfx-3, green sonus pad). Sonus' paintwork cleanser was a final clean-polish (sonus blue pad), and since it was a bit milder than sfx 3, I found it to be a good step. Contrary to some comments on sonus paintwork cleanser, I also noticed that it had a bit of a mechanical polishing effect, as it did a great job of finishing the work of the sfx-3. The paintwork cleanser didn't clump either (it did spatter a bit, like sfx-3 and the rest of sonus' polishes, but I knew this from previous experience).



I took a bit of time today to look back on the work, and I must say that I am very satisfied with Vintage so far. I couldn't believe that there was a difference between it and concours, but as you said earlier, there was a significant difference to me. Vintage added more animation...almost like a "wine" effect (if that is a good analogy). I want to be a little careful with this one though, because I like a lot of wax on my cars, but at the same time I feel that the zymols have two talents: they work best with color in the lighter stages, and they will flood with depth after a couple of sessions. Too much of it will cause it to haze, so I want to observe the area where this model zymol will reach its peak. Vintage was also a bit easier to apply than concours for some reason (you know the adage that you shouldn't let zymol dry!). I was able to extend a bit further out to the car without getting into trouble.



Time will tell how well this wax will mature this year!
 
Thanks. Mike that means a lot if it passes your acid test. Mid Life, just because its older doesn't mean that it can't compete. That's the beauty in detailing.....experimenting and using different products and methods to reach your appearance peak. My credo is....cars, and materials differ, but when it comes to detailing, its fair game!!!
 
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