Re: Chemistry degree required
What an amazing (and different) perspective on something I have never given much thought to. I have no doubt that many detailers would be far less equipped with knowledge (myself included) if it wasn't for the advent of detailing forums. That said there is a lot of misinformation that also spreads like wildfire.
Medicine as a whole benefits greatly from open communication and shared advances, probably for several reasons:
People's lives are at stake- In detailing most (with rare exception) mistakes can be fixed.
Medicine is regulated by governing bodies- Want to be a doctor? Here is what you must do. Want to be a nurse? You must complete these standards. With detailing, a guy can go to Target, and twenty three dollars later he is a detailer.. There is no governing body, no regulations, and no concrete definition of the word detailer.
Collective geniuses, who have all suprased certain recommendations, formulate procedures that work in most cases on most humans. However, like cars, not all humans are created equally, and some situations require expertise. Performing heart surgery on an infant who has a unique and complex birth defect is beyond the scope of most heart surgeons, for example.
There is also a hiearchy in detailing. Can you go to a school for 2-5 days and learn how to clean most cars pretty good, and not mess too much stuff up? Sure, and if you work hard, market yourself correctly, and offer competitve pricing, you will likely make a decent living.
Should you be correcting original paint on a 6 million dollar automobile at this level? No.
Would detailing in as a whole benefit from more open communication? I don't know honestly. I think in some ways the forums have created detailers who work on nice cars, and do all the steps, but have created less than stellar work. They simply don't have the experience (although they have all the knowledge) that is necessary.
Also, as opposed to medicine, where a procedure based approach will work the great majority of the time, every car is truly different. There is a certain artistic aspect to detailing that requires experience to hone.
In the world of detailing it is completely up to the individual. In Medicine you have to satisfy certain requirements and standards.
I have met many detailers who have 10-30 years experience but my estimation only have 3 months of actual experience x 40-120. In medicine the physicians are required (by standards) to attend courses that further their education and advance their knowledge. You have to pay to play.
In detailing you get a lot of guys who learned misinformation 30 years ago, who are still doing it wrong 30 years later, but brag about their experience. People's expectations about how a car should look are so low that you often them see them driving brand new cars that look terrible, with their friends bragging about the shiny new paint.
I have been on a four year journey to learn more and more about how and why this stuff works, for the sake of personal knowledge and because I believe it is necessary for me to be the best detailer I can be.
Originally posted by Mary S
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What an amazing (and different) perspective on something I have never given much thought to. I have no doubt that many detailers would be far less equipped with knowledge (myself included) if it wasn't for the advent of detailing forums. That said there is a lot of misinformation that also spreads like wildfire.
Medicine as a whole benefits greatly from open communication and shared advances, probably for several reasons:
People's lives are at stake- In detailing most (with rare exception) mistakes can be fixed.
Medicine is regulated by governing bodies- Want to be a doctor? Here is what you must do. Want to be a nurse? You must complete these standards. With detailing, a guy can go to Target, and twenty three dollars later he is a detailer.. There is no governing body, no regulations, and no concrete definition of the word detailer.
Collective geniuses, who have all suprased certain recommendations, formulate procedures that work in most cases on most humans. However, like cars, not all humans are created equally, and some situations require expertise. Performing heart surgery on an infant who has a unique and complex birth defect is beyond the scope of most heart surgeons, for example.
There is also a hiearchy in detailing. Can you go to a school for 2-5 days and learn how to clean most cars pretty good, and not mess too much stuff up? Sure, and if you work hard, market yourself correctly, and offer competitve pricing, you will likely make a decent living.
Should you be correcting original paint on a 6 million dollar automobile at this level? No.
Would detailing in as a whole benefit from more open communication? I don't know honestly. I think in some ways the forums have created detailers who work on nice cars, and do all the steps, but have created less than stellar work. They simply don't have the experience (although they have all the knowledge) that is necessary.
Also, as opposed to medicine, where a procedure based approach will work the great majority of the time, every car is truly different. There is a certain artistic aspect to detailing that requires experience to hone.
So in the world of detailing, it matters if a detailer has had 30 years experience instead of 25 or 20, for a class that takes 5 days. And in medicine, it takes 10 years to train a teacher of medical students whom it takes 7 to 10 years to train.
In the world of detailing it is completely up to the individual. In Medicine you have to satisfy certain requirements and standards.
I have met many detailers who have 10-30 years experience but my estimation only have 3 months of actual experience x 40-120. In medicine the physicians are required (by standards) to attend courses that further their education and advance their knowledge. You have to pay to play.
In detailing you get a lot of guys who learned misinformation 30 years ago, who are still doing it wrong 30 years later, but brag about their experience. People's expectations about how a car should look are so low that you often them see them driving brand new cars that look terrible, with their friends bragging about the shiny new paint.
I am so totally rambling, I know. I know detailing is an art, and I want to know the science of it. And because unlike drugs, the composition of detailing chemicals is not publicly available, that would be hard to do.
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