Ask a Pro Detailer

Paint Defects and Paint Correction – Part 3 : The Problem With A Quick Buff

Rodney Tatum of Mirror Reflections Auto Spa shares what exactly imperfections are, how to remove them and how to prevent them in this 4 part article series. Click here to read them all!

Although it would not be appropriate to relate the IMPORTANCE of polishing a car to that of the work of a surgeon, the two have a lot in common.  A quality-based paint correction service requires precise work and a variety of resources.  As a consumer, you may have noticed the price margins between two auto detailing services being hundreds of miles apart.  You may have had been told by one detailer the timescale for a level of service could start at several hours with other services going on for multiple days.  In your mind, you may have thought this person was crazy because other detailers have told you it should only take a few hours and for significantly less money.  Not all auto detailing is created equal.  This is especially the case with Paint Correction.

In the world of paint correction, NONE of these statements are accurate. In fact, they are often a red flag that in the long run your car will end up in worse shape than before you left it.  You may notice these defects immediately when the sun shines on your car, or a couple of weeks later.

But why?

These are holograms.

Polishers can leave their own defects as well.  The most common and glaring are holograms. They happen mostly with the use of a rotary polisher, although (rare) possible with a forced rotation style polisher.  This is not to denigrate the use or value of a rotary polisher.  Some very masterful work can be done with a rotary polisher.  Here is the problem.  Most production based detailing shops have their employees use the rotary polisher, not because they are skilled with it, but because it provides a quicker result.  Unskilled use of a rotary combined with the many corners cut in an environment where the priority is to get as many cars in and out of a shop, dealership, or body shop lead to cars looking like a disaster.  This is not meant to bash production type services.  They exists for the same reason automatic car washes exist, a majority market exists for cheaper and faster services.  There is a demand.

Paint Correction Detailing, whether it ends with a wax or coating, is a very time-consuming service.  This is because the act of polishing is the most time consuming exterior car care activity a detailer will engage in.  Let us say for example I am working on a 2 stage correction with a Dual Action Polisher.  This is something that could be recommended to remove most automatic wash-induced swirls.  You were working on a small car and never had to change up your process.  Not including the time to apply tape, the wash, decontamination (clay, etc), wax or any other steps, I have spent a minimum of 6 hours polishing.  That is with no breaks.

It is not what everyone wants to hear, but there are fast food and slowed cooked versions of the same meal.  If you put the work of a production shop that churns out cars as fast as possible, next to a low volume detailing business that has a professional investing the proper time with high-quality resources on a vehicle, there would be no comparison.  It is not that one is wrong or right.  Much of what is done to create that mirror-like appearance on your car happens after the initial wash and before the wax, sealant, or coating is applied.  The paint protection prep process which is not only removing bonded contaminants but polishing your paint (use of micro abrasives).   Wax or sealant protection will only have light filling characteristics, giving the allusion of permanent removal.

If I was looking for a great detailer for a two-stage correction job during our conversation, I would ask myself these kinds of questions:

Does his or her processes resemble what I have discussed in Part 1?  When exploring his or her portfolio are there any close up pictures or videos, 50/50 shots?  Is there any consistent concentrated LED lighting?  Do these images and videos include black vehicles (close up) or only just light colored vehicles?  Do the images appear to be real or stock photos?  Perhaps MOST IMPORTANT, does this person give you the impression that he or she cares about how you will take car of your car after all of this work?

I would be weary of a detailer who is not transparent in their process.  I make it a point of emphasis with any potential client that they should ask questions and do research, especially with higher level services.

This is not meant to be an assault on many of the higher volume production shops or most dealership detailing teams.  They are often put on real restraints due to limited time and resources.  Smaller detailing businesses often face real or perceived stress to cater to a market who are unaware and also apathetic towards the level of resources (time, skill, expenses, physical strain) that go into a quality detailing service.  This is especially the case with Paint Correction.  A fast food restaurant and a 5-Star restaurant may have the same product on its menu but the similarities with the product usually end at the menu.  Neither is technically right or wrong.

What I will say is if you were debating between a significantly lesser service from an accomplished detailer versus someone who promised a correction service for a significantly lesser price I would choose the lesser service option.  For two reasons:  1st high-end level detailers just like reputable product manufacturers tend to have one thing in common, underselling and over-delivering.  Many of my clients tell me they are stunned with how their car looks and how much I put into my basic All In One package.  I am 100% confident my peers on the DI Ask-A-Pro blog could tell you the same thing.  The 2nd reason is that some of the worst cosmetic damage done to your paint comes from someone doing advanced work who (for a variety of reasons) has no business doing.  I communicate with many professionals who fix or try as best they can to undo the damage done from another auto detailer.  If you are observant of cars out in public you will see a lot of them with holograms.  So If it sounds too good to be true, it probably is.

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