quote:
Originally posted by SoCalSteve
Greetings to all,
My 70 280SL has just been repainted in its original Glasurit Tobacco Brown. The depth and saturation of color are incredible. How do I keep this paint looking like this? What products do you all recommend and how often should detailing occur. The finish seems to scratch at the slightest provocation. Any advice on how to deal with that. Also, swirl marks! As I have none at the moment, how do you avoid them on a dark color?
Many thanks,
Steve Murphy
Los Angeles
Steve,
My car was painted with Glasurit as part of the restoration in 2001. There is no way short of never using the car (trailer queen), and keeping it dust free, to prevent some minor scratching. It is part of the life of a car and the paint. It is expensive; the reducer was over $200 per gallon back in 2001. Materials alone--reducer, solvent, paint etc. for the 113 was over $1,000. But the results speak for themselves.
You can avoid classic swirl marks by doing most everything by hand. In your area, take your car to Bob Geco, and keep it out of the sun. Sun will do more damage to a car then any other weather. If you leave it outside, get a proper cover for it depending on your storage conditions.
My paint job seems to carry a permanent wax job. It shines like no other I've seen. Water has always beaded up on the surface. I wash it when dusty (never gets really dirty) with Zymol wash. I rinse when I can at my own car wash, where I exclusively use RO distilled "spot free" water. I dry it and polish it with a microfiber cloth. Chamois is product of the past. Microfiber outperforms chamois in every respect.
After 4 years I do seem to have some minor scratches--simply from foreign particles in the wash water, etc. Cannot be avoided. I think a good "clay job" will remove some of these that are on the surface. Zymol Carbon (hand wax) and one step cleaner wax (a liquid) will finish it off. I don't think that a machine job is in order, simple hand work for me at this point.
My repaint is so far superior to what the factory put on. That, and the care that a classic gets today ensure my car stays looking pretty good. Yours will too.
In between washings, I use one of those "California Dusters" to remove the dust.
Michael Salemi
1969 280SL
Signal Red w/Black Leather
Restored