2019 Tacoma TRD Pro

TripleX

New member
Customer wanted a clean, shine and protect package and I was happy to oblige! Started off with RESET soap to clean off any previous wax from the dealer. While it only has 200 miles on it, the water was beading so whatever it was, had to come off! I then used Meguiar's APC to clean the tires and wheelwells from previous dressing and sling. The interior was treated to INSIDE and windows were cleaned with Chemical Guys window cleaner. Engine cleaned with Simple Green and dressed with Ultima tire and trim dressing, as was the roof rack, mirror bottoms, mudflaps, fender flares, grille, tailgate latch and bedliner rails. Tires dressed with Chemical Guys tire dressing and the whole truck was coated with 2 coats of JetSeal and 2 coats of Carnauba Wax. As much as I wanted to use Reload or Hydr02 lite, he needed longer term protection but was not ready to pay for CQuartz yet. That will happen in the spring. Hope you like my results, it took 5 hours to complete.

-Mike

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Customer wanted a clean, shine and protect package and I was happy to oblige!
Started off with RESET soap to clean off any previous wax from the dealer.
While it only has 200 miles on it, the water was beading so whatever it was, had to come off!

I then used Meguiar's APC to clean the tires and wheelwells from previous dressing and sling.
The interior was treated to INSIDE and windows were cleaned with Chemical Guys window cleaner.
Engine cleaned with Simple Green and dressed with Ultima tire and trim dressing,
as was the roof rack, mirror bottoms, mudflaps, fender flares, grille, tailgate latch and bedliner rails.
Tires dressed with Chemical Guys tire dressing and the whole truck was coated with 2 coats of JetSeal and 2 coats of Carnauba Wax.
As much as I wanted to use Reload or Hydr02 lite, he needed longer term protection but was not ready to pay for CQuartz yet.
That will happen in the spring. Hope you like my results, it took 5 hours to complete.

-Mike

A couple of things you may wish to try...
Have you ever tried Sonus Trim and Motor Kote to dress the engine bay? It has a subtle matte OEM factory showroom finish.
Have you tried the CarPro GlassFiber Microfiber Towel? I like the streak-free results. It kinda "foam" feeling towel. No streaks.
My new favorite tire dressing is...OBSSSSD Tire Dressing - Matte. It's easy and leaves a dark look (NO glazed doughnut look)

Nice clean job for only five hours! Good Job!
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Thanks Merlin. I am always open to new ideas and input from others. The Ultima and Chemical Guys products do have a bit of excess shine to them so I will try the products you listed. As far as towels go, currently I only have Chemical Guys Workhorse and some random others. I am looking to upgrade my entire selection but still researching who to go with. I know carpro makes good stuff, as does the rag company. If you have any suggestions, it would be greatly appreciated.
 
Let's start with a few basic questions. Do you do machine polishing?
If so what machine, pads, polish, backing plate size etc. do you have/use?

Why this question? I have certain towels I like to use to remove compound polish.
Wash mitt? Drying Towels? Compound/polish towels? Glass towels? Shop towels and Quick Detailing towels?
 
Sure Merlin, answers are below:

Started with a Torq10fx like most with Hexlogic pads, V compounds, and other CG products. I then escalated to Lake Country microfiber cutting and finishing pads, their foam CCS pads, and upgraded to Flex 7-15 and 7-12 polishers. Never changed the backing plates on either machine. I tried Griots line of compounds and polishes, which work great on certain paint types (medium and soft). I tried CarPro ClearCut after winning a contest from ChicagoAutoPros and that was impressive when used on a BMW. Also works well on GM, Audi and Dodge.

As for towels, I have mostly stuck with ChemGuys line-up. I use their workhorse towels for most of the clean-up (blue for windows, brown for leather, green for exterior, etc.) and have been using their Happy Ending towels for product removal when polishing. However, when I did the Tacoma, those towels were not removing the product, merely smearing it. I used a WorkHorse towel as a test and the smears cleared up instantly. I thought a higher GSM would be better for product removal but was wrong in this case. The lower GSM worked far better, and no marring either. I typically dry with air first, then have a variety of drying towels I use (waffle weave, plush, etc.) but they fill up so quick that I need at least 4 to dry a car. I have no problem replacing my entire inventory but want towels for cleaning, product removal, and eventually cheap-o's for when I start doing Ceramic coatings.

Hope that sheds some more light on the subject.
 
Sure Merlin, answers are below:

Started with a Torq10fx like most with Hexlogic pads, V compounds, and other CG products.
I then escalated to Lake Country microfiber cutting and finishing pads, their foam CCS pads,
and upgraded to Flex 7-15 and 7-12 polishers. Never changed the backing plates on either machine.
I tried Griots line of compounds and polishes, which work great on certain paint types (medium and soft).
I tried CarPro ClearCut after winning a contest from ChicagoAutoPros and that was impressive when used on a BMW.
Also works well on GM, Audi and Dodge.

As for towels, I have mostly stuck with ChemGuys line-up.
I use their workhorse towels for most of the clean-up (blue for windows, brown for leather, green for exterior, etc.)
and have been using their Happy Ending towels for product removal when polishing.

However, when I did the Tacoma, those towels were not removing the product, merely smearing it.
I used a WorkHorse towel as a test and the smears cleared up instantly.
I thought a higher GSM would be better for product removal but was wrong in this case.
The lower GSM worked far better, and no marring either.


I typically dry with air first, then have a variety of drying towels
I use (waffle weave, plush, etc.) but they fill up so quick that I need at least 4 to dry a car.
I have no problem replacing my entire inventory but want towels for cleaning, product removal,
and eventually cheap-o's for when I start doing Ceramic coatings.

Hope that sheds some more light on the subject.

I prefer 5" pads and I have changed all my backing plates to 5"
(with the exception of the 3" and the Rupes iBrid nano)
I like the handling on the machine better with 5" pads.
This also helps keep pad size inventory to one 5" size.

I personally have never been a big fan of CCS pads...but that's me.
Carpro, Scholls, Rupes, Lake Country HDO etc. all make great pads.
Have you tried Meguiars Microfiber Cutting Disc - 5" for correction?

Compound: Scholl Concepts S3 Gold XXL - 16 oz.
Polish: Scholl Concepts S30+ Nano Compound - 16 oz.

Wash mitt My new favorite is RaceGlaze Wool Wash Mitt
(I have gotten spoiled with this mitt)

Drying Towels - I'd try
Microfiber Madness Dry Me Crazy (25" x 17")
and/or
2) CarPro DHydrate Drying Towel - 20" x 22"
or
1) CarPro DHydrate Drying Towel - 28" x 40"

Why?
2) DHydrate 20" x 22"'s can entirely dry a vehicle (one for each hand)
1) DHydrate 28" x 40" can entirely dry a vehicle (throw and lightly pull)
It depends...I can throw and pull the 28x40 and get roof, glass etc.
Completely dry and streak free in one pull. I like quick and easy.
The 2 towel / 2 handed method is also good because the towels are lighter.

What air source do you use?
Now I do drying towel first then I use air for cracks, crevices, wheels etc.
Make sure the drying towels are CLEAN! Be sure you are always working CLEAN!

Compound/Polish Removal
CarPro 2 Face (No Lint) 16" x 16" - Blue/ Orange 10 Pack
Use Eraser, if needed, to remove polish without dragging it across the paint.

Do not use cheap-o's towels when working with coatings they will scratch!

What I do...
CarPro 2 Face (No Lint) 16" x 16" - Blue/ Orange 10 Pack
I use the orange for compound/polish removal.
I use the blue to remove and level coatings.

NOTE: I throw away the used blues when the coating job is done.
Some folks soak 'em in APC etc. but personally I don't trust 'em.
For me blue towel cost is "built in" to the price of the coating job.
Coatings harden. Coating residue in blue towels harden, and can scratch.
Don't cross contaminate. That's why I like the "color-coded" 10 pack.

Glass Towel:
CarPro GlassFiber Microfiber Towel 16"x 16" (does not streak!)
Follow with a CarPro 2 Face (No Lint) orange 16" x 16" if needed.

Quick Detailing towel
The one. The only - Microfiber Madness Crazy Pile (16" x 16")
A bottle of Merlin's Majic Elixer and a crazy pile towel and client "Love you long time".

Lesson Learned: Don't get hung up on GSM.
Use a towel that does not scratch and works for the job you need it to do!
 
Now thats the type of advice that a detailer needs! A million thanks Merlin, it would appear I got some money to spend and the answers to your questions are below:

I have tried Meguiars cutting disc but have heard that the backing can pull away from the pad after high use. Never had a problem but the LC have been quite good to me. I also tried the Griots MF pads but they seem to "cake up" even after cleaning.

For washing, I have been using the MF madness incredipad and also have the incredipole. Love the hell out of those things!

For air, I am using a Porter Cable pancake compressor. Noisy, like all PC products, but it works good for getting water out of cracks and crevices. May upgrade to a leaf blower dedicated to cars but dont want gas or battery. Still shopping for that.

I have been using the color match system since I first started and, while it does work well, I realized that 10 of each color is just not enough. Even folding into 4ths, I always seem to go through a good 20 towels for each detail. If I have more than 2 in a day, I am out of towels! While it hasn't happened yet, it could! One day...

Lastly, cleanliness is the name of the game! Towels, floor, walls, tools, everything!

Haven't yet needed the Nano but seems like it would be a good tool to have. Aside from its battery powered.
 
Now thats the type of advice that a detailer needs! A million thanks Merlin, it would appear I got some money to spend and the answers to your questions are below:

I have tried Meguiars cutting disc but have heard that the backing can pull away from the pad after high use. Never had a problem but the LC have been quite good to me. I also tried the Griots MF pads but they seem to "cake up" even after cleaning.

For washing, I have been using the MF madness incredipad and also have the incredipole. Love the hell out of those things!

For air, I am using a Porter Cable pancake compressor. Noisy, like all PC products, but it works good for getting water out of cracks and crevices.
May upgrade to a leaf blower dedicated to cars but dont want gas or battery. Still shopping for that.

I have been using the color match system since I first started and, while it does work well, I realized that 10 of each color is just not enough. Even folding into 4ths, I always seem to go through a good 20 towels for each detail. If I have more than 2 in a day, I am out of towels! While it hasn't happened yet, it could! One day...

Lastly, cleanliness is the name of the game! Towels, floor, walls, tools, everything!

Haven't yet needed the Nano but seems like it would be a good tool to have. Aside from its battery powered.

Early on Megs had issues with the backing coming off. Use 'em no higher that 4800 OPM and you'll be fine even with a long throw.
I have not had a single Megs mf cutting pad (that I purchased from Sky's The Limit) that had the backing come off the pad.

MF madness incredipad and incredipole are good. For washing, I personally like the Raceglaze wash mitt but that's me.
...and I have quite a few wash mitts, including the "Wookies Fist", Carpro Merino wash mitt and the MFM IncrediMitt.

For a Blower. I believe Home Depot has a blower/vac (about $100) that has a FILTER on the blower. The filter is important!
Or you can bite the bullet and go for the Master Blaster 8hp warm filtered air (The catch. You need a 20 amp circuit)

For air I went for the California Air Tools - 10 Gal. 2.0 HP Ultra Quiet and Oil-Free Electric Air Compressor. Small and quiet!

Drying towels, compound and polish towels, shop towels, wheel towels and LSP removal towels are all different.
Try a 10 pack of the Carpro 2 face towels and see if you like them. I know you'll like the CarPro DHydrate Drying Towels.

I use the nano all the time. It has an electric a/c adapter and I think it runs stronger when I use it.
On the other hand, it comes with 2 batteries and I charge one while I'm using the other one. No Prob.
It's a great tool for the small areas and a quick spot touch up without setting up a full sized machine.
 
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