I am a firm believer that the sun usually tells no lies in regard to the status of the paint. However, not all of us have the luxury of getting our babies out in the sun this time of year.
Even so, I've shown my car at cruise's and have noticed that sometimes the paint imperfections are very noticable, while other times it looks flawless. Same holds true now as I detail in my garage.
Basically, I am frustrated by lighting. I am wondering if Mr. Phillips and others can chime in regarding use of proper lighting in detailing.
Specifically,
1) What type of lighting is best for detailing (fluorescent, halogen, xenon)
2) More wattage = improved paint condition assessment?
3) Should lighting be perpendicular to work area (i.e. like dropping a rock into a pond), or oblique (like skipping the rock across the pond)
4) Do different paint colors have different lighting needs?
5) Does imperfection type have any influence on its visibility?
I have a pair of weak fluorescent lights on the garage ceiling that are basically worthless. A 1000 W halogen tower lamp (2 lamps), and a xenon flashlight are what I use when I am detailing.
I have had the best success at evaluating my paint surface with my little xenon flashlight in the garage with all the lights turned off, but this is cumbersome.
Anyway, I am very interested in what you have to say. Thanks.
Even so, I've shown my car at cruise's and have noticed that sometimes the paint imperfections are very noticable, while other times it looks flawless. Same holds true now as I detail in my garage.
Basically, I am frustrated by lighting. I am wondering if Mr. Phillips and others can chime in regarding use of proper lighting in detailing.
Specifically,
1) What type of lighting is best for detailing (fluorescent, halogen, xenon)
2) More wattage = improved paint condition assessment?
3) Should lighting be perpendicular to work area (i.e. like dropping a rock into a pond), or oblique (like skipping the rock across the pond)
4) Do different paint colors have different lighting needs?
5) Does imperfection type have any influence on its visibility?
I have a pair of weak fluorescent lights on the garage ceiling that are basically worthless. A 1000 W halogen tower lamp (2 lamps), and a xenon flashlight are what I use when I am detailing.
I have had the best success at evaluating my paint surface with my little xenon flashlight in the garage with all the lights turned off, but this is cumbersome.
Anyway, I am very interested in what you have to say. Thanks.
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