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How to clean exterior finish that’s been sitting in the sun for years
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Hi guys, when I bought my 69, it had been sitting outside in the sun for years.
Overall the paint looks pretty decent but it’s got some oxidation and pretty rough to the touch. I’d like to give it a thorough cleaning. What do you guys recommend? Clay bar? Polish and buffing wheel? Mineral cleaner? I’m all ears here. Also, on the passenger side, the steel bolts holding the side mirror rusted badly and this rust would drip down the door for god knows how many years in the rain. Any recommendations on how to get that stain off the door without harming the paint? I’ve included a pic below. You can see the stain on the passenger side door. Thank you! |
Re: How to clean exterior finish that’s been sitting in the sun for years
I'd use rubbing compound on the whole truck first, with polishing compound after that. That's way out of clay bar territory. Maybe that'll take the rust stain off? For the rust stain, I'd use WD-40 and 0000 steel wool if the compounds don't remove it.
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Re: How to clean exterior finish that’s been sitting in the sun for years
I'd start with a pressure wash first, then go to a hand wash. After that, you can evaluate the paint and go from there.
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Re: How to clean exterior finish that’s been sitting in the sun for years
X2 ^^^. I`d probably use 3 or 4 cutting foam pads for the rubbing compound and a few for polishing. If you spread it out, you can wash the pads and just use 3 or 4. Just be careful not to go through the paint, take what the paint gives you. I would clay it after the rubbing compound, then polish. Then clean paint before you add any wax or sealant protection.
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Re: How to clean exterior finish that’s been sitting in the sun for years
Meguiar's #7 is a pretty good first step to clean and allegedly condition old paint. It's abrasive free
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Re: How to clean exterior finish that’s been sitting in the sun for years
Google Comet & Scotchbrite or SOS pads.
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Re: How to clean exterior finish that’s been sitting in the sun for years
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Re: How to clean exterior finish that’s been sitting in the sun for years
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Re: How to clean exterior finish that’s been sitting in the sun for years
Comet and a car wash brush will get it pretty clean for a start..
Looks like a nice truck. |
Re: How to clean exterior finish that’s been sitting in the sun for years
What ever you decide, find a not so noticable section and test all the way to finished result.
All the above ideas are abrasive. The condition and thickness of this original paint is unknown. Be careful. The more aggressive the "cleaning product" the deeper the scratches will be in the remaining paint. Then you have to remove more paint to get those scratches out. By the time you get to your finished result you have elevated your risk of polishing off all the original paint. Given what appears to be the truck's originality, loosing the paint would be a shame. |
Re: How to clean exterior finish that’s been sitting in the sun for years
X2 ^^ Pick a test spot to figure out the best process, start to finish. Start less aggressive and go from there to get desired results. If you`re truly trying to save the paint, take your time and put in the effort. It`ll pay off in the end.
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Re: How to clean exterior finish that’s been sitting in the sun for years
Thank you for all the replies
I will start with pressure wash, followed by hand wash, and then assess which option to pursue next. One more thing, my roof has a bit of surface rust that I’d like to address. What’s recommended there? Thank you. |
Re: How to clean exterior finish that’s been sitting in the sun for years
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The only thing that I am going to say about buffers and these old trucks is that you had better have plenty of skill and finesse with with a buffer before you try it on the old original paint on one of these. |
Re: How to clean exterior finish that’s been sitting in the sun for years
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https://www.summitracing.com/parts/por-7424xp The pro type 7-9" orbital polishers with the wool pads are definitely going to have a learning curve |
Re: How to clean exterior finish that’s been sitting in the sun for years
I used to hand-ball the heavy grit cleaners. No chance for burn-through, but pretty time-consuming. Nowadays, I have to pay people to do it.
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Re: How to clean exterior finish that’s been sitting in the sun for years
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https://www.detailking.com/products/...isher-fc3321-z OP I would start out by cleaning the paint several times by washing . Test a small area with different degrees of aggressive paint correction products . Always try the least aggressive first then work up to what works on your paint . You might even try 2000 to 3000 sand paper to start . I did this on my 68 |
Re: How to clean exterior finish that’s been sitting in the sun for years
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Re: How to clean exterior finish that’s been sitting in the sun for years
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This Iron remover help some. Link: https://shop.advanceautoparts.com/p/...%20Restoration Attachment 2444995 |
Re: How to clean exterior finish that’s been sitting in the sun for years
Regular toilet bowl cleaner works great for rust stains also..
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Re: How to clean exterior finish that’s been sitting in the sun for years
Ideal candidate for the Comet wash. Then, cutting/buffing/polish/wax. Or cut/wax, lol
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Re: How to clean exterior finish that’s been sitting in the sun for years
Can someone link me to this comet wash?
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Re: How to clean exterior finish that’s been sitting in the sun for years
Comet cleanser, but I bet Bon Ami would work just as well, and has no chlorine in it. YMMV
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Re: How to clean exterior finish that’s been sitting in the sun for years
Oooh, you guys are actually referring to the powder in the green can that I use to clean my toilets? Really? :-)
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Re: How to clean exterior finish that’s been sitting in the sun for years
Not I.
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Re: How to clean exterior finish that’s been sitting in the sun for years
My 67 C30 wore the original orange/red color when I got it. I'd bet it was last hand washed 40 years ago.
I used a good detergent and Scotchbrite pads to scrub it down. Had a nice satin look to it when dried. Next, I used a regular auto paste wax and rubbed it in. It seemed to suck in the wax so I did it a second time and that gave me the look I was after. It didn't really shine like a fresh waxed new car. It has a flat/satin finish that screamed original paint. |
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