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Aston Martin DB9 - 3 Day Major



  Audi A4 AVANT 1.9TDi
Aston Martin DB9 – Tour De France Blue.

A 3 day Major Paint Correction Detail required to restore the paintwork back to (better than(!)) showroom standard.

Having suffered from corrosion around the handle on both doors (common problem), the Aston had been completely resprayed by a main dealer repair centre.

Usually (even a ‘standard’ car without additional respray work), Aston Martin’s suffer from DA sanding marks being left in the paint from factory. In the last month, I have now seen three examples of this on different cars.


1) – Tour De France Blue V8 Vantage:

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2) – Meteorite Grey DB9:

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And the third example is the car in question, the Tour De France Blue DB9.

Inspection.

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Excess polish residues spotted from previous attempts:

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As per, wheels, arches and tyres sorted first.

AMDetails’ wheel cleaner, Megs Super Degreaser and various mitts/brushes used to clean the front-facing and inner rim.

Tyres degreased and scrubbed:

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Calipers tidied with various brushes:

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Front facing:

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and then deep into the inner rim:

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After tar removal, Iron-X was used to eat into the caked pitting and contaminants:

10 seconds after initial application:

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A few minutes later and after agitation:

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Process repeated 2/3 times per wheel.

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Moving on to the wash stages – rinse, foam, rinse, two bucket wash, rinse and indoors for claying.

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In terms of contaminants, a fair bit was pulled from the paint. Remember though, the paint is relatively fresh so not ‘too much’ build-up.

After being blown dry with the Black Baron (removal of trapped water from badges, crevices, panel gaps etc) a few pieces of trim were removed to make polishing easier, and, delicate areas taped up.

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Inspection time!

General defects and machine buffertrails:

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And now the worst of the sanding marks: (remember, an Aston Martin dealer had finished and presented this car back to the customer in this condition)

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Every corner, every crevice curve and edge was ‘dulled’ by the haze left from sanding marks. Going to be a tricky one this!

Paint thickness readings? Well, the whole car was averaging ~230um. Some areas pushing 500, some, high 100’s.

Roof:

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Bonnet:

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And the rear quarters:

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Starting high, the roof was my test subject for pad and polish combinations.

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Settling on Scholl Concepts S17+ polish with (occasionally) the Scholl white/black spider sandwich pad, and, Lake Country Orange and Green 140mm Constant Pressure Pads.

50/50:

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Before/After:

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Already, I can see this colour is going to look pretty amazing once complete.

On the O/S, the A-C pillars were corrected with spot pads (Lake Country orange/green again)

Before/After:

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Sanding marks on the edge; requiring multiple hits here to fully remove. Before/After:

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Down on the rear quarter. A mix of 140mm and 100mm pads needed here; tricky curves and angles.

Before/After:

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Caution here, a slight bubble on the O/S/R arch!

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Before/After:

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Protective film given a couple of hits with the DA polisher to try and improve things here.

Before/After:

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All refined down (Menzerna polishes) and looking sharp!

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Remember I said the doors were repainted because of the corrosion around the handles? Look closely, and, you’ll spot the repair work. (Quite noticeable in this case…)

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Although aesthetically pleasing, the door handles’ delicate design can lead to scratches in the surrounding areas. Before/After:

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Upper edge of the doors covered in sanding marks.

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After:

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Lots more spotted in the middle:

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After the first hit, not all of the ‘pigtails’ (sanding marks) were removed.

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The worst areas requiring 2+ hits to chase out completely.

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Lower door, before/after:

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And for a real tricky spot, a 3M Green Compounding Pad was loaded onto a smaller, 50mm, Dodo Juice backing plate – allowing the pad to flex more and comfortably ‘sit in’ the curves of the body.

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See here, the normal spot pad and backing plate setup just wouldn’t touch them:

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Boom. After:

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O/S, almost complete!

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More fiddly curves to tackle on the wing…

The majority of the correction was broken down into small spot pad work.

Before:

(Look at the haze running all the way down the middle of the channel)

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The same area with the brinkmann LED torch:

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In progress:

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After:

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and with the brinkman LED:

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Before:

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During:

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Boom:

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Lastly, the lower section:

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The amount of colour trapped beneath the haze was unreal – end of day 1 and I could see this was set to be a mega turnaround.


Wing mirror housing:

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Moving onto the bonnet.

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…more curves = more sanding marks

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After:

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In spinning the car round, I caught a teaser of what to expect when the jobs complete:

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Continuing down the N/S:

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Mirrors:

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The lowest part of the door, riddled in unfinished sanding marks – before/after:

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Refined down and packed up for the end of day 2.

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The bootlid had been hit hard. Not necessarily by sanding marks, just, marring, swirls and random blemishes.

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Rear reg plate was given a quick lick:

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With the remaining machine work complete (sills, bumpers and the rest of the bonnet), the car was outside ready for a rinse to remove dusting before moving on to the IPA wipedown, protection and final dressings etc..

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Water sheeted over the panels to aid drying stage:

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Once back in and bone dry, exterior britework treated with Jeffs Werkstat Prime:

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Engine bay finalised; rubbers and plastics dressed and metal work polished:

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With the paintwork perfectly clean after multiple IPA wipedowns, BlackFire’s Wet Diamond All Finish Paint Protection (WDAFPP) was applied by DA.

Exterior plastics restored using G-Techniq C4:

Before:

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After: (massive durability on this product – given the vehicles usage, I’d say they’ll stay ‘as new’ now for the lifetime of the car)

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Glass, with 3M’s cleaner:

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Ever tried to clean the inside of the rear window? Awkward!

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A little worrying, sanding marks spotted either side of the bonnet on the windscreen:

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With the wheels, tyres, exhausts and paintwork complete, time to stand back and admire before collection:

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A stunning colour. A stunning car. And if I say so myself, a stunning transformation!

Aston Martin – Power. Beauty. Soul.

Thanks for reading,

Jim. (PS, video footage was captured throughout this detail – stuck for time at the minute but when I get chance, I hope to add a HD YouTube clip to the report)
 
  Moonlight Blue 225
When can you do mine! Mine is a lot worse than that, but i know nothing about deatiling. A stunning transformation though, really good!
 
  Now Sold :-(
As ever the result is awesome. :cool:
One day the little old Clio will have to be treated to this level of care and attention.
 
  260% JCW
Nice work matey love the work................. not being rude but how much do you charge for a full detail?
 

Rob

ClioSport Moderator
You really are a painters worst nightmare Jim, no doubt you're not that popular at local dealerships either ;)

Great work again, love the quality of the write ups.
 
That truely is an amazing transformation, your very talented at what you do! When I get my Bzanze E36 M3 at the end of the month i'd love for someone like yourself to go over the car, will send you an email regarding costs etc.

Cheers
Nick
 
  Turbos.
Great job. So how do you rate Aston's paint? I remember going to Newport Pagnell some years ago and they used to talk about how their painting was the best in the world, but i guess they would! They said they did like a bzillion (approximate figure...) coats of paint and it was a far longer process than any other manufacturer. That was probably back in about 2003 though...
 
  Audi A4 AVANT 1.9TDi
Missed this one.

Saw you earlier this week Jimbo.

Keeping busy?

At Asda!? Saw you too but I thought you missed me. (the new Asda ROCKS)

Got a fair few bits on, yeah. Slow overal thought but I guess it's going to be! This week was 2 days on Bentley GTC, and singles on a RR Vogue and RS4 today.


Great job. So how do you rate Aston's paint? I remember going to Newport Pagnell some years ago and they used to talk about how their painting was the best in the world, but i guess they would! They said they did like a bzillion (approximate figure...) coats of paint and it was a far longer process than any other manufacturer. That was probably back in about 2003 though...

The 'paint' is nice. Very nice. It's their finishing that lets it down. Most Aston's out there on the road (unless they've been properly done already) will have DA sanding marks somewhere down the line. 300 odd hours on the build, but just 15-20 more to get it perfect. Whoops..! Fingers crossed, I'll have a 6yo DB9 in Meteorite Grey coming to me soon for a few days. I'll try report this one and share my findings.
 
  Audi A4 AVANT 1.9TDi
Not seen too many problems on the roads yet because of it?! I guess at kick-out time (5-6pm) it gets busy.

Adam's Clio, yep! Smart, isn't it. Rocking some purple Porsche rims now. I had it in a few weeks ago for a full interior overhaul - just needs the outside doing now :quiet:;)
 


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