โJun-01-2022 01:24 PM
โJun-17-2022 05:27 AM
arcsum68 wrote:
I appreciate the advice, but the second time around took a surprising amount of work to get it looking good, felt like should have stripped it first since the previous wax was gumming up my pads. I ended up going to the full rotary buffer and even then I was struggling. .....
โJun-16-2022 05:30 PM
arcsum68 wrote:Veebyes wrote:
In the boating world we say that a boat can be any colour, as long as it is white.
Dark coloured gelcoat does not do well with sun. Once it has been let go it takes alot of work to bring it back. It also needs to be done much more frequently to keep it looking good.
Looking at your current state it is not as bad as when you started. A good going over with a cleaner wax, such as 3M cleaner wax, followed by the Meguires Flagship wax again should restore to the condition of your first highly successful efforts.
I have had saltwater kept boats since 1981. A tough environment to be in. There are many great products out there these days but time & sun will always destroy them without regular attention.
I appreciate the advice, but the second time around took a surprising amount of work to get it looking good, felt like should have stripped it first since the previous wax was gumming up my pads. I ended up going to the full rotary buffer and even then I was struggling. I am not about to put the same product on it that never went through a full NorCal summer and looked terrible in 6 months. Maybe I got a bad batch? I dont know, but you know how the saying goes, fool me once...
โJun-16-2022 04:28 PM
Veebyes wrote:
In the boating world we say that a boat can be any colour, as long as it is white.
Dark coloured gelcoat does not do well with sun. Once it has been let go it takes alot of work to bring it back. It also needs to be done much more frequently to keep it looking good.
Looking at your current state it is not as bad as when you started. A good going over with a cleaner wax, such as 3M cleaner wax, followed by the Meguires Flagship wax again should restore to the condition of your first highly successful efforts.
I have had saltwater kept boats since 1981. A tough environment to be in. There are many great products out there these days but time & sun will always destroy them without regular attention.
โJun-16-2022 04:24 PM
โJun-10-2022 06:29 PM
โJun-09-2022 08:55 AM
โJun-09-2022 07:47 AM
B.O. Plenty wrote:
You can buff that til the cows come home. It won't last. The only real cure is to have it painted. I've had two fifth wheels painted. If you shop you can find places that will do it for around $1,000. Forget the RV dealers. Go to a big truck bodyshop.
B.O.
โJun-09-2022 07:45 AM
arcsum68 wrote:Grit dog wrote:arcsum68 wrote:
To be honest I highly doubt they would guarantee anything anyway since I could just go home and apply a stripping agent to the work just to screw with them.
Well, you obviously don't know much about detailing, as you can't "strip" the polished look off of a surface.
This is 100% false. You can absolutely strip wax/polish off a vehicle and that is often the starting point for many detailers. There are even specific products sold just for that purpose as you will see in one of the first videos. HEREare many videos of that exact process on youtube.
Link This is a product link on Amazon, gets great reviews and specifically removes old waxes and sealants.
โJun-08-2022 10:55 PM
โJun-02-2022 08:12 AM
arcsum68 wrote:Grit dog wrote:arcsum68 wrote:
To be honest I highly doubt they would guarantee anything anyway since I could just go home and apply a stripping agent to the work just to screw with them.
Well, you obviously don't know much about detailing, as you can't "strip" the polished look off of a surface.
This is 100% false. You can absolutely strip wax/polish off a vehicle and that is often the starting point for many detailers. There are even specific products sold just for that purpose as you will see in one of the first videos. HEREare many videos of that exact process on youtube.
Link This is a product link on Amazon, gets great reviews and specifically removes old waxes and sealants.
โJun-02-2022 07:36 AM
Grit dog wrote:arcsum68 wrote:
To be honest I highly doubt they would guarantee anything anyway since I could just go home and apply a stripping agent to the work just to screw with them.
Well, you obviously don't know much about detailing, as you can't "strip" the polished look off of a surface.
โJun-02-2022 06:56 AM
โJun-02-2022 04:32 AM
โJun-02-2022 04:28 AM