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I know its old news but I second seth's thought. I used to work for a dealership and we were required to cover defects in that same manner using an aerosol. (and yeah, it looked like garbage when it rained.) I dont know if you have tried it, but you might try an orbital. If your test spot shows that you are getting the results that you are looking for, an orbital with a terry bonnet might help you along a bit.
If it was caused by the clay (highly unlikely) then you probably didn't use enough clay lube. My guess is that where you bought it from use a product that filled in the defects rather than remove them. Where you rubbed the clay more, the more of the fill product was removed.
I gave up on hand correcting a long time ago, so I'm not sure what products to suggest. I think you would be better off buying a dual action polisher and doing the correction by machine.
I tried terry cloth towels as well as micro fiber towels with the SwirlX and the ScratchX, and both seemed to leave mini-swirl marks. Is my paint just really sensitive? Or, am I pressing too hard? Or do I have too high of expectations of how pristine the products will leave the paint when finished?
I tried terry cloth towels as well as micro fiber towels with the SwirlX and the ScratchX, and both seemed to leave mini-swirl marks. Is my paint just really sensitive? Or, am I pressing too hard? Or do I have too high of expectations of how pristine the products will leave the paint when finished?
Sounds like you may have very soft paint. Try going back to SwirlX with a foam pad.
Originally posted by Blueline
I own a silver vehicle and a black vehicle owns me. The black one demands attention, washing, detailing, waxing and an occasional dinner out at a nice restaurant. The silver one demands nothing and it looks just fine. I think the black vehicle is taking advantage of me, and the silver car is more my style. We can go out for a drive without her makeup and she looks fine. If I want to take the black one out, it is three or four hours in the "bathroom" to get ready.
the claybar will only scratch if there is not enough lube between the bar and the paint and i would go straight to #80 speed glaze or #205 ULTRA finishing polish
If you tried the terry cloth towels and they left marring. Go back to the foam pads. Try a couple of test spots. Vary the pressure you are using. See what works best. Then go from there.
We're inclined to agree with those who stated that whatever the dealer used was covering existing problems. The areas you worked more aggressively or just longer with the clay would have more of the filling product removed, thereby exposing more of the "old" defects.
It is also quite possible that the paint on this Hyundai is pretty touch sensitive, which would certainly explain the marring you're seeing with the microfiber and terry applicators.
You might want to read through this thread dealing with delicate paint.
Michael Stoops
Senior Global Product & Training Specialist | Meguiar's Inc.
Remember, this hobby is supposed to be your therapy, not the reason you need therapy.
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