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Thread: Detailing Tools

  1. #1

    Default Detailing Tools

    OK I'm not talking about certain individuals here but actual tools

    Anyone know some good car detailing forums? I am looking at picking up a 6" orbital buffer, but I want to get the best bang for the buck. Currently I'm looking at a Porter Cable or the Griots models. Some of the Griots kits look nice, but are they the best?

    FYI I'm only looking at using this for mild swirl removal and waxing nothing to complex as I've got a good connection for needs.
    "Pain is inevitable, suffering is optional." Haruki Murakami

  2. #2

  3. #3

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Titus View Post
    Paging POS.
    (just park it his his driveway and come back to get it tomorrow)

  4. #4

    Default

    Yeah but what happens when it's not there when I get back?
    "Pain is inevitable, suffering is optional." Haruki Murakami

  5. #5
    MME Goodwill Ambassador onething's Avatar
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    Default

    I had him come to my garage. It worked better for me.

    POS is the King of Shine
    Bidden or not bidden, God is present
    "Up until the moment of impact, I was still having fun." Bob J. Hall San Francisco Region



  6. #6

    Default

    So, here's how I wash my car. Did the "major" wash this afternoon in preparation of a road trip to Austin this weekend. Takes about an hour and a half once you start doing it regularly.

    First, the buying list.

    Hardware store
    Water hose and trigger spray nozzle
    Shop Vac (for interior)
    Leaf Blower (to dry car)
    Wheelwell and chassis brush
    Porter Cable random orbital buffer (Lowes)
    Three 5-gallon buckets
    Wenol metal polish for polished aluminum

    Online - Detailer’s Domain
    Two Grit Guards
    Wheel spoke and face brushes
    Menzerna Power Finish
    Detailer’s Domain buffing pads and backing plate for Porter Cable buffer

    Online – Rag Shack
    Rag Shack microfiber application towels
    Majestic Solutions Ultra Gloss Car Wash

    Online - Werkstat
    Acrylic Jett Trigger

    Online – Roadsters.com
    Gibbs penetrant

    Home Depot
    Three Spray bottles for ZEP citrus, WD-40 and alcohol-water mix
    Masking tape – green (blue 1.5”x180’ $7.87)
    Foam paintbrushes for trim, interior, engine, etc
    Dry paintbrush (for dusting interior)
    WD-40 (gallons) ($14.97 gallon)
    Denatured alcohol (15.29 gallon)
    ZEP citrus cleaner
    Grout sponges (approx $2 each)
    Sprayway or Invisible Glass aerosol cleaner

    Target
    Target "Vroom" label microfiber drying towels
    Woolite foaming upholstery cleaner (for interior)
    Dawn Dishwashing soap to strip all finishes

    WalMart
    Autoglym High Definition Wax (on sale for $20 per pot, may not be there much longer)

    PepBoys
    3M General Purpose Adhesive Remover
    Autoglym Vinyl & Rubber Care OR Vinylex by Lexol for trim, plastic, engine, interior
    Meguiars Final Inspection instant detailer
    Claybars
    Parts washing brushes

    Costco
    General Purpose Costco cheap yellow microfiber towels for dirty areas (30 towels for $15)

    The sequence to follow:

    Clean under the hood and the differential with WD-40 and towels. Hit very bad areas with ZEP citrus all purpose cleaner followed by a rinse and WD-40. Apply rubber-vinyl dressing to plastic and rubber parts using a foam brush and microfiber towel. Apply Gibbs penetrant to raw aluminum parts.

    Use ZEP citrus all purpose cleaner, rinse bucket and brushes to clean the wheels, tires and exhaust tip. Rinse.
    Use ZEP and a brush to clean the wheel wells. Rinse.
    Polish the exposed aluminum lips, center nuts and exhaust with Wenol metal polish.
    Use an applicator to apply Gibbs penetrant to the polished areas of the wheels and exhaust.

    Apply vinyl/rubber dressing to all unpainted black trim and rubber seals on the car using a foam paintbrush (edges of taillights with the trunk open, wiper cowl, fog light housings, exterior radiator cowl, weather-stripping, front and rear window trim, hardtop edging trim, antenna base, wiper arm plugs, side mirror joints, door top trim, headlight door cowls and rubber flaps)

    Using the two buckets with grit guards, mix up a solution with Dawn dishwashing soap and wash the car with sponges. Dry it with a leaf blower.

    Use clay and Meguiars Final Inspection to finish cleaning the paint.

    Mask difficult to clean areas with blue tape. Use the Porter Cable and a variety of pads and Menzerna Power Finish to buff the paint. Clean up after the buffing with the alcohol mix or Final Inspection quick detailer.

    Wipe down chrome details with alcohol mix (door handles, hardtop latches, antenna).

    Use newsprint and glass cleaner on all the glass and mirrors.

    Use microfiber towels and Acrylic Jet Trigger to seal the paint.

    Use microfiber towels and Autoglym High Definition wax to bring out more depth.

    Use applicator pads or microfiber to dress the tires with rubber dressing.

    Done.

    For intermediate cleanup.
    Wash the wheels and wheelwells using the same procedure.
    Apply dressing to the rubber and plastic parts.
    Wash the paint using Majestic Ultra Gloss.
    Touch-up using the quick detailer.
    Dress tires.

  7. #7
    Team Cheap Bastard
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    sammm's Avatar
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    NC
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    There's a sticky in Miata Tech section -
    http://www.dfwmiata.com/showthread.p...sy-of-XM_Rocks)

    Slip POS a few bucks and stand back if you don't want to DIY.

  8. #8
    Driver Nails's Avatar
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    In the land of Gar
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    Quote Originally Posted by modernbeat View Post
    So, here's how I wash my car. Did the "major" wash this afternoon in preparation of a road trip to Austin this weekend. Takes about an hour and a half once you start doing it regularly.

    First, the buying list.

    Hardware store
    Water hose and trigger spray nozzle
    Shop Vac (for interior)
    Leaf Blower (to dry car)
    Wheelwell and chassis brush
    Porter Cable random orbital buffer (Lowes)
    Three 5-gallon buckets
    Wenol metal polish for polished aluminum

    Online - Detailer’s Domain
    Two Grit Guards
    Wheel spoke and face brushes
    Menzerna Power Finish
    Detailer’s Domain buffing pads and backing plate for Porter Cable buffer

    Online – Rag Shack
    Rag Shack microfiber application towels
    Majestic Solutions Ultra Gloss Car Wash

    Online - Werkstat
    Acrylic Jett Trigger

    Online – Roadsters.com
    Gibbs penetrant

    Home Depot
    Three Spray bottles for ZEP citrus, WD-40 and alcohol-water mix
    Masking tape – green (blue 1.5”x180’ $7.87)
    Foam paintbrushes for trim, interior, engine, etc
    Dry paintbrush (for dusting interior)
    WD-40 (gallons) ($14.97 gallon)
    Denatured alcohol (15.29 gallon)
    ZEP citrus cleaner
    Grout sponges (approx $2 each)
    Sprayway or Invisible Glass aerosol cleaner

    Target
    Target "Vroom" label microfiber drying towels
    Woolite foaming upholstery cleaner (for interior)
    Dawn Dishwashing soap to strip all finishes

    WalMart
    Autoglym High Definition Wax (on sale for $20 per pot, may not be there much longer)

    PepBoys
    3M General Purpose Adhesive Remover
    Autoglym Vinyl & Rubber Care OR Vinylex by Lexol for trim, plastic, engine, interior
    Meguiars Final Inspection instant detailer
    Claybars
    Parts washing brushes

    Costco
    General Purpose Costco cheap yellow microfiber towels for dirty areas (30 towels for $15)

    The sequence to follow:

    Clean under the hood and the differential with WD-40 and towels. Hit very bad areas with ZEP citrus all purpose cleaner followed by a rinse and WD-40. Apply rubber-vinyl dressing to plastic and rubber parts using a foam brush and microfiber towel. Apply Gibbs penetrant to raw aluminum parts.

    Use ZEP citrus all purpose cleaner, rinse bucket and brushes to clean the wheels, tires and exhaust tip. Rinse.
    Use ZEP and a brush to clean the wheel wells. Rinse.
    Polish the exposed aluminum lips, center nuts and exhaust with Wenol metal polish.
    Use an applicator to apply Gibbs penetrant to the polished areas of the wheels and exhaust.

    Apply vinyl/rubber dressing to all unpainted black trim and rubber seals on the car using a foam paintbrush (edges of taillights with the trunk open, wiper cowl, fog light housings, exterior radiator cowl, weather-stripping, front and rear window trim, hardtop edging trim, antenna base, wiper arm plugs, side mirror joints, door top trim, headlight door cowls and rubber flaps)

    Using the two buckets with grit guards, mix up a solution with Dawn dishwashing soap and wash the car with sponges. Dry it with a leaf blower.

    Use clay and Meguiars Final Inspection to finish cleaning the paint.

    Mask difficult to clean areas with blue tape. Use the Porter Cable and a variety of pads and Menzerna Power Finish to buff the paint. Clean up after the buffing with the alcohol mix or Final Inspection quick detailer.

    Wipe down chrome details with alcohol mix (door handles, hardtop latches, antenna).

    Use newsprint and glass cleaner on all the glass and mirrors.

    Use microfiber towels and Acrylic Jet Trigger to seal the paint.

    Use microfiber towels and Autoglym High Definition wax to bring out more depth.

    Use applicator pads or microfiber to dress the tires with rubber dressing.

    Done.

    For intermediate cleanup.
    Wash the wheels and wheelwells using the same procedure.
    Apply dressing to the rubber and plastic parts.
    Wash the paint using Majestic Ultra Gloss.
    Touch-up using the quick detailer.
    Dress tires.
    Wow! That's very thorough. Thanks for posting. What do you use for vinyl top?

  9. #9

    Default

    I used to use Aerospace 303, but now I'd use Autoglym Vinyl and Rubber. It smells better, works about the same, and is slightly cheaper and easier to find.

    Also, my current Miata is hardtop only. I'm a coupe type of guy.

  10. #10

  11. #11

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by ken o View Post
    Is that your website telling you that it's time to buy a new car when the one you have gets dirty?
    VW Bug in running shoes
    M Porcupine sedan
    M Porcupine coupe
    Crusty old e46 beater
    Battery Powered appliance car

  12. #12

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by ken o View Post
    +1!

    I got most of my stuff from them but I do shop around.

    For the DA I went with the Meguires - http://www.autogeek.net/meguiars-dua...sher-g110.html

    I use Lake Country 6-1/2" css Pads http://truthindetailing.com/Forum/showthread.php?t=791

    I use Menzerna Products for Polish - http://www.menzernausa.com/menzerna-automotive.htm

    Klasse All in One for Sealing - http://www.amazon.com/Klasse-All-In-.../dp/B0002LBKEW

    And Ragg Topp Products for the top - http://www.properautocare.com/raggto...FSFl7AodLx7Qtg

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