I have had several requests for the process I use for my 5.5-hour detailing. I am going to share it with pictures and narrative so this will be a bit long. Here at the beach, we have a crowded season and I am always getting comments on the Telly and the shine.
I had the paint corrected with ceramics and
XPEL PPF Bikini installed when it was new. I also got the Wear Point (inside door handles, door threshold, etc) PPF done as well along with tinting of all the rear windows and light tinting on the driver's and passengers' sides. I also got a UV filter tint done for the windshield (can be brutal at the coast).
The first thing I do is get up early in the morning around 6 AM to avoid the hot sun on my black car. I lay all items out and fill the buckets. I get out my pressure washer (electric) and step ladder (for the roof).
The wheel bucket is separate from my body wash and rinse buckets to avoid any abrasive contamination. Remember the body finish spider webbing effect of small scratches is often done to small contaminants, many in the microscopic range. The human eye is only good down to 40 microns (the size of a fleck of ginger) but a lot of spider webbing scatches are caused by 10-20 micron abrasives. So finish preservation starts with minimalizing contamination in the cleaning process. I always start with the wheels--the dirty job first. Years ago I would have done those last but I learned from my son, a professional detailer, to get it done first. I used to follow the standard procedure "Top Down--Left to Right'.
After hoo
View attachment 21983king up the water to the pres
View attachment 21984sure washer, I pull the car out of the garage and spray it generously with ONR (Optimum No Rinse). This loosens up the dirt and starts the Water Beading, also known more scientifically as hydrophobicity, which is simply when water beads up on your car's surface and rolls off. Breaking that surface tension should start early in the process and a good pump spray of ONR helps. I let the ONR sit while I do the wheels. I might reapply ONR if it is starting to dry but otherwise let it do its thing why I do the wheels.
This is the garage and the Detailing Wall where I keep all my detailing materials and equipment. Everything you see on that wall and on the floor is for detailing except the refrigerator which is where I keep the drinks.
Below is the ONR and pump--takes 20-25 good pumps to get a good foam from this pumper.
View attachment 21988
I will continue this in another post to keep it from being so large.