Hi folks,
As you've all seen pictures of the £500 Autotest Phaeton, you'll probably have noticed that the black gelcoat has had a hard life and is in need of some TLC. Steve had a quick go with some crappy polish and it made naff-all difference. It's properly rough to touch so it'll need cut back prior to polishing.
So, a case of attack it with T-Cut or is there something more specialist to be using?
Cheers
Tags:
check out maguire`s marine restorer and polish ......
only any good if its gel cote no good if its been sprayed
Iagree G3 soapey water and a mop
I ordered some of those Meguiar's products from Amazon, but I can't tell you how they work because they haven't arrived yet. They seem to have a good write-up. You'd have thought that I could just buy something in Bristol, with its marine heritage, but no - had to go to Amazon, what is the world coming to?
When i used to work with GRP i used a product called Faracla, awesome stuff and comes in different grades, most GRP workshops and suppliers use it. I cant recommend it enough.
Thanks for the suggestions so far, chaps. I'll look into the Meguairs and Faracla stuff.
As I'm more inclined to drive cars at speed through forests as opposed to cherishing and polishing them, do you just whack a polishing mop into any old angle grinder, or you you need to buy a rotary polisher? Or is it impracticable to attempt to do it by hand?
Not looking for show-standard results - it's got enough crazing and cracks that we could polish it forever and it would never be particularly nice!
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