I originally asked:
Well, last night I got the last part for my PC 7424 in the mail. So I went to work. But first, while waiting for my supplies over the last few days, I had to do the following:
1- Wash the car
2- Use Paint Cleaner
3- Clay the car
4- Tape and newspaper the car
5- Sand/scuff some rust marks on door edges (1985 Volvo 245)
That's a good many hours right there.
Then, once all this was done and I actually put the machine on the car:
1- Five - seven minutes per section (like 1/2 a door panel) using #83. I learned that it takes at least 5 minutes per section because #83 tells YOU when it's done. You don't tell it. #83 has a 'working life.' It starts off liquidy, then gets hazy, then when it looks like it's all gone and the paint starts to shine - then it's done.
2- It took me almost 2.5 hours to do one side of the car. I used #83 with the 7006 maroon soft-buff pad, followed by Sonus FX-1 and the orange pad. Sonus FX-1 has about a 3 minute life and is high-gloss. I bought it to experiment and I'm pleased so far as a follow up to #83.
3- Even sitting in a chair, your back still feels it after a couple hours.
So - with 1/2 of my car done, and a total estimate of about 8 hours on the exterior when I finish, I can safely say that if you want it done right and done well - "QUALITY TAKES TIME."
Lesson learned.
Jamie
Hi,
I am a newbie here, just bought a PC 7424 and pad kit. Hasn't arrived yet, just bought it online.
I'm restoring a 1985 Volvo (silver) 245 wagon that's pretty bad in places. To keep it short, here are my two newbie questions:
1- Why/how can it take 9 - 20+ hours to detail a car? Specifically, after you wash, use a clay kit, tape and complete preparations of the paint, I am trying to figure how much time the machine is actually running?
2- Can someone please give me examples of something taking several hours to do. For example, I can't see a hood of a car taking more than 15 minutes for one product and another 15 for a second product using a machine. That's 30 minutes for the hood, 30 for the roof, 30 for the trunk, 1 hour per side. That's 3.5 hours.
Again, I am a newbie, and I am sure I am wrong, but would love to know why. It seems like any more time with the machine running would wear the paint down to nothing.
Please educate me, and if there were a class near Dallas Texas I would love to be in it.
Thanks!
Jamie
I am a newbie here, just bought a PC 7424 and pad kit. Hasn't arrived yet, just bought it online.
I'm restoring a 1985 Volvo (silver) 245 wagon that's pretty bad in places. To keep it short, here are my two newbie questions:
1- Why/how can it take 9 - 20+ hours to detail a car? Specifically, after you wash, use a clay kit, tape and complete preparations of the paint, I am trying to figure how much time the machine is actually running?
2- Can someone please give me examples of something taking several hours to do. For example, I can't see a hood of a car taking more than 15 minutes for one product and another 15 for a second product using a machine. That's 30 minutes for the hood, 30 for the roof, 30 for the trunk, 1 hour per side. That's 3.5 hours.
Again, I am a newbie, and I am sure I am wrong, but would love to know why. It seems like any more time with the machine running would wear the paint down to nothing.
Please educate me, and if there were a class near Dallas Texas I would love to be in it.
Thanks!
Jamie
1- Wash the car
2- Use Paint Cleaner
3- Clay the car
4- Tape and newspaper the car
5- Sand/scuff some rust marks on door edges (1985 Volvo 245)
That's a good many hours right there.
Then, once all this was done and I actually put the machine on the car:
1- Five - seven minutes per section (like 1/2 a door panel) using #83. I learned that it takes at least 5 minutes per section because #83 tells YOU when it's done. You don't tell it. #83 has a 'working life.' It starts off liquidy, then gets hazy, then when it looks like it's all gone and the paint starts to shine - then it's done.
2- It took me almost 2.5 hours to do one side of the car. I used #83 with the 7006 maroon soft-buff pad, followed by Sonus FX-1 and the orange pad. Sonus FX-1 has about a 3 minute life and is high-gloss. I bought it to experiment and I'm pleased so far as a follow up to #83.
3- Even sitting in a chair, your back still feels it after a couple hours.
So - with 1/2 of my car done, and a total estimate of about 8 hours on the exterior when I finish, I can safely say that if you want it done right and done well - "QUALITY TAKES TIME."
Lesson learned.
Jamie
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