View Full Version : Polished Bliss: RS4 on 20s - Studio shots!


Polished Bliss
04 June 2008, 15:36
With our six month waiting list causing the odd bit of grief with both new and existing customers, and Marsha now happily in post and tackling the orders, I guessed it was about time I should ease myself out of my chair and dust the cobwebs off my Makita... roll on a summer full of weekend details.

First up, a nice RS4, recently modified with a nice set of arch filling 20s of off an S5...

http://i49.photobucket.com/albums/f293/polishedbliss/polishedbliss/310508rs4/DSC_0029.jpg

http://i49.photobucket.com/albums/f293/polishedbliss/polishedbliss/310508rs4/DSC_0032.jpg

I'd inspected the car a month or two back and booked it in for a minor correction detail, as in the sun it didn't look to bad at all. Big mistake, but I'll come back to that later. First of all, the wash process, starting with setting up the waste water collection bund...

http://i49.photobucket.com/albums/f293/polishedbliss/polishedbliss/310508rs4/DSC_0031.jpg

Hot foam at 60oC does a marvellous job of removing traffic films and the like, but bug splattered front ends and dirty trims always benefit from a pre-soak with P21S Total Auto Wash...

http://i49.photobucket.com/albums/f293/polishedbliss/polishedbliss/310508rs4/DSC_0036.jpg

http://i49.photobucket.com/albums/f293/polishedbliss/polishedbliss/310508rs4/DSC_0037.jpg

http://i49.photobucket.com/albums/f293/polishedbliss/polishedbliss/310508rs4/DSC_0038.jpg

as do door shuts...

http://i49.photobucket.com/albums/f293/polishedbliss/polishedbliss/310508rs4/DSC_0040.jpg

and engine bays...

http://i49.photobucket.com/albums/f293/polishedbliss/polishedbliss/310508rs4/DSC_0041.jpg

After a little light agitation with microfibre wash mitts and several brushes. I rinsed the whole lot off at 60oC, and then switched the lance into hot foam mode...

http://i49.photobucket.com/albums/f293/polishedbliss/polishedbliss/310508rs4/DSC_0042.jpg

With the foam soaking, I set about the wheels, finding that only normal suds were required to bring them up 100%...

http://i49.photobucket.com/albums/f293/polishedbliss/polishedbliss/310508rs4/DSC_0045.jpg

After rinsing off again at 60oC, I then used Autosmart Tardis to remove any remaining bug splatter and tar spots. This product is best applied neat, and should then be left to work for a minute or so before being wiped gently with a microfibre work towel - this ensures any stubborn residues are removed. A top tip is to bin the towel after use, as if you try and wash it it will stink out your machine...

http://i49.photobucket.com/albums/f293/polishedbliss/polishedbliss/310508rs4/DSC_0046.jpg

After another thorough rinse off, I rolled the car inside and clayed the glass and bodywork using Meguiars detailing Clay Mild and Last Touch as the lube...

http://i49.photobucket.com/albums/f293/polishedbliss/polishedbliss/310508rs4/DSC_0049.jpg

Then it was back outside for a final rinse before drying off with the leaf blower. Just at this point the sun made an appearance, and this is what I could see - pretty much the same as when I had first inspected the car. Menzerna 106FA and a polishing pad it was to be then - hurrah!

http://i49.photobucket.com/albums/f293/polishedbliss/polishedbliss/310508rs4/DSC_0051.jpg

http://i49.photobucket.com/albums/f293/polishedbliss/polishedbliss/310508rs4/DSC_0052.jpg

However, this turned out to be a hasty assumption. Inside, under the 500W halogens numerous other defects started to appear... including some nasty random scratches on virtually every panel. Hmm, maybe 106FA won't cut it after all...

Bonnet Before

http://i49.photobucket.com/albums/f293/polishedbliss/polishedbliss/310508rs4/DSC_0058.jpg

Bonnet After

http://i49.photobucket.com/albums/f293/polishedbliss/polishedbliss/310508rs4/DSC_0062.jpg

The final process needed here was 1 x 106FA @ 1800rpm on a 3M High Gloss Polishing Pad, 2 x RD3.02 @ 1800rpm on a 3M High Gloss Polishing Pad, and finally 1 x 85RD on a 3M Ultrafina SE Finishing Pad. Fantastic... the dream of an easy single stage process was well and truly out of the window. Here's me finishing off the bonnet...

http://i49.photobucket.com/albums/f293/polishedbliss/polishedbliss/310508rs4/DSC_0061.jpg

The roof required just 1 x RD3.02 @ 2000rpm on a 3M High Gloss Polishing Pad, and finally 1 x 85RD on a 3M Ultrafina SE Finishing Pad. But then the bootlid reared its ugly head, and when I saw this...

http://i49.photobucket.com/albums/f293/polishedbliss/polishedbliss/310508rs4/DSC_0066.jpg

...out came the big guns. 1 x 3M Fast Cut Plus @ 1800rpm on a 3M High Gloss Polishing Pad and then 1 x 85RD on a 3M Ultrafina SE Finishing Pad gave me this...

http://i49.photobucket.com/albums/f293/polishedbliss/polishedbliss/310508rs4/DSC_0070.jpg

Why not use a compounding pad? Well, some of the curves on the RS4 are a pig with harder pads, and Fast Cut Plus seems to work very well even with a soft pad, so why make life harder? This panel set the process for much of the rest of the car... but by this point it was 7pm, so time to call it a day with just the bonnet, roof and bootlid fully corrected.

Total work time for day one = 11 hours.

Day two dawned with me feeling somewhat unwell - a bad headache and the constant feeling of wanting to throw up, so the whole day ended up being a rather testing experience. Each side took around 3 hours to fully correct and the bumpers took another hour each. The rear bumper was the worst of the lot, looking like this before....

http://i49.photobucket.com/albums/f293/polishedbliss/polishedbliss/310508rs4/DSC_0083.jpg

and this after 1 x RD3.02 on a Lake Country CCS Light Cut Spot Pad at speed 5 on the G220 (I'm still not inclined to rotary bumpers, as I have a tendency to like to work the rotary hard, and heat remains an issue!)...

http://i49.photobucket.com/albums/f293/polishedbliss/polishedbliss/310508rs4/DSC_0085.jpg

With the correction done by just after 4pm, it was time to dust off all of the polishing dust (mostly generated by the Fast Cut Plus) using one of our new wool dusters - great bit of kit, a third of the price of others on the market...

http://i49.photobucket.com/albums/f293/polishedbliss/polishedbliss/310508rs4/DSC_0086.jpg

Then in quick succession, I cleaned out all of the shuts (hoover, then Last Touch wipe down), dressed the engine bay with 303 Aerospace Protectant, cleaned the exterior glass with Meguiars Glass Cleaner Concentrate, dressed the tires with Blackfire Long Lasting Tire Gel, shampooed the boot with Brisk and the help of Charles (the wet & dry hoover) and finally polished the large rear exhaust tips with Raceglaze Metal Polish. All of this took around two and a half hours. Here are the finals...

http://i49.photobucket.com/albums/f293/polishedbliss/polishedbliss/310508rs4/DSC_0094.jpg

http://i49.photobucket.com/albums/f293/polishedbliss/polishedbliss/310508rs4/DSC_0095.jpg

http://i49.photobucket.com/albums/f293/polishedbliss/polishedbliss/310508rs4/DSC_0096.jpg

http://i49.photobucket.com/albums/f293/polishedbliss/polishedbliss/310508rs4/DSC_0097.jpg

Hang on a minute!

Sorry, I forgot the wax! And the poison for this detail? Blackfire Midnight Sun, for a little jetting of the colour and a dash more reflectivity...

http://i49.photobucket.com/albums/f293/polishedbliss/polishedbliss/310508rs4/DSC_0098.jpg

Well, okay, as it turned out it made very little difference to the overall finish, which just goes to show that a few extra hours spent with 85RD on a finishing pad makes all the difference between a good finish (i.e. that given for example by RD3.02 when properly finished down) and a stunning finish to which LSP's add little if anything at all. Here are the proper afters, with the indicator lenses also put back in!

http://i49.photobucket.com/albums/f293/polishedbliss/polishedbliss/310508rs4/DSC_0107.jpg

http://i49.photobucket.com/albums/f293/polishedbliss/polishedbliss/310508rs4/DSC_0115.jpg

http://i49.photobucket.com/albums/f293/polishedbliss/polishedbliss/310508rs4/DSC_0120.jpg

http://i49.photobucket.com/albums/f293/polishedbliss/polishedbliss/310508rs4/DSC_0110.jpg

http://i49.photobucket.com/albums/f293/polishedbliss/polishedbliss/310508rs4/DSC_0122.jpg

Total work time for both days = 23 hours.

:thumb:

COLZO
04 June 2008, 22:17
Great job mate. Love the RS4s.

F1 CJE UK
04 June 2008, 23:18
Just when we thought you had retired from doing proper work :D not bad for a rookie :lol1:


Stunning results :notworthy

C_WRX
05 June 2008, 10:35
Excellent work, good write up too, plenty of explanations in there.
Just love RS4's, that colour is lovely in the flesh.

pippyrips
06 June 2008, 16:07
Fancy a weekend in Wales to sort mine?!

Great work:)

s70rjw
06 June 2008, 22:14
Absolutely superb results. Even before the wax..

WaltonWRX
07 June 2008, 00:31
Holy C*ap thats clean, looks stunning! :notworthy

Clarkie172
07 June 2008, 09:20
brilliant results. I need to get into cleaning/caring more.

Mike Murphy
08 June 2008, 12:04
Another great job, Rich!!

Gazz300
08 June 2008, 15:09
Fancy a weekend in Wales to sort mine?!

Great work:)

Fire up the BBQ and make it a polishing party Rob!:luxhello: If you trust us that is???

Polished Bliss
11 June 2008, 04:21
Fancy a weekend in Wales to sort mine?!

Great work:)

Polished Bliss tour would be ace... if only we had the bloomin' time! One day maybe, one day... :)


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