So due to being lazy and busy, more so lazy :smt003 I've put off doing a heavy detail on my truck I picked up last year. I picked it up from a buddy I went to high school with, that a couple years ago I worked with his construction company and it was worked like any construction tool. Now I own it, and am starting my own pressure washing & detailing company early next year, and it needs to look better haha.
As you'll see in the pictures its all damage is in the truck bed mainly, while we were hauling stuff and slinging block into it.
I'm going to tackle this one by
-any damage down to body panels, black enamel paint pen
-mastercut + 100% wool on rotary
-pp2 + 75%wool/25%poly on rotary
-pp2 + foamed wool on rotary
I'm not bothering with claying this project, due to master + rotary works so heavy oversprays coming off like butter. Some detailers I've met over the years have a problem with this, but you guys see the paint condition, if you'd even call it paint. For anyone unsure, you always start with clay before any paint correction, but this is not a common detail. I only use mastercut on wetsanded panels, and car accident panels that people want buffed instead of repaint.
Yesterday I filled the deepest (they're all deep haha) scratches with enamel, and will fire up the rotary in a few minutes after my coffee.
More pictures coming
As you'll see in the pictures its all damage is in the truck bed mainly, while we were hauling stuff and slinging block into it.

I'm going to tackle this one by
-any damage down to body panels, black enamel paint pen
-mastercut + 100% wool on rotary
-pp2 + 75%wool/25%poly on rotary
-pp2 + foamed wool on rotary
I'm not bothering with claying this project, due to master + rotary works so heavy oversprays coming off like butter. Some detailers I've met over the years have a problem with this, but you guys see the paint condition, if you'd even call it paint. For anyone unsure, you always start with clay before any paint correction, but this is not a common detail. I only use mastercut on wetsanded panels, and car accident panels that people want buffed instead of repaint.
Yesterday I filled the deepest (they're all deep haha) scratches with enamel, and will fire up the rotary in a few minutes after my coffee.
More pictures coming