ok will do.Noooo, not chamois!, see the cleaning thread for tips and tricks etc
£1200 for a polish and coating is silly and quite frankly a waste of money on most cars.
I did it once and it was circa £750 for a serious amount of correction. The well known detailer I used (ran into him on his main day job when we were on a boat) said just get Auto Finesse Lavish foam and use that. Far simpler, cheaper and does a great job for 6months, then just repeat.
I'm proud of my whole fleet and have never applied a ceramic coat on them(other than the X5 in the example above, but it needed serious polishing).It’s not silly if you’re proud of your vehicles and enjoy having a spotless car all the time
At the end of the day, people are fully entitled to spend what they like on whatever pleases them - if that happens to be on keeping their car’s paintwork in excellent condition, then so be it
I personally prefer to learn and do it myself, but I can see why some wouldn’t.
I'm proud of my whole fleet and have never applied a ceramic coat on them(other than the X5 in the example above, but it needed serious polishing).
Proud of your cars does not mean throwing £1200 away is the acceptable norm.
A wash, decon, clay and foam on coating is simple to do and doesn't really need much learning. Even a hand polish with an AIO container fillers can do a cracking job. Repeating the coating 6 monthly isn't hard and you'd not be able to tell the difference between that and a coating applied by a paid for detailer.
It seems that becoming obsessed by detailing has become the norm for many car enthusiasts. Not unexpected given the internet and social media, a slow motion beading shot makes many weak the knees![]()
1. If it’s £400 it either: isn’t a ceramic coating or; it isn’t done properly.
2. You might be able to with a good LED light. Not all ceramic coatings are smooth (in fact most aren’t in my experience). If it hasn’t been done perfectly, you might see some slight hazing if the product has flashed before being buffed properly.
Most dealerships use either a “ceramic” wax or “ceramic” sealant. Neither of these products are a ceramic coating in the traditional sense - they won’t cure/bond to the paint work. They’ll sit on top as a coating which will quickly degrade over a 3-12 month period depending on how regularly you wash/which products you use.
Furthermore, they usually won’t prepare the paintwork sufficiently for a ceramic coat
A good detailing shop will charge ~£800-£1200 for an IPace with paint correction and panel preparation.
Not sure what he's doing. But he hired a "Detailer" to do this to the cars.I have visions of the dealership putting the ceramic on straight after machine polishing![]()