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bigmackmiller
11-30-2018, 11:50 PM
Finally giving my new truck the proper care it deserves and getting it protected for winter, going around with wolfgang Uber compound and a orange hex logic pad finding all these little spots, not sure if it’s over spray, clear starting to fail or something else? I can see them in areas that have not yet been polished so don’t believe it’s anything related to that, just wondering if it’s worth the effort to get more aggressive and try to remove them or if it is clear failure I already know that a respray is the only fix

https://uploads.tapatalk-cdn.com/20181201/fd6f1f80c9809ecb6c3b74e5ce861bfc.jpg

AZpolisher15
12-01-2018, 01:39 AM
Is that a re-paint?

bigmackmiller
12-01-2018, 02:03 AM
Not to my knowledge, the good has been repainted and the bed sides were repaired, but this was on the top of the cab, almost thinking micro etching after looking at some pics, i can’t catch anything with my nail

Eldorado2k
12-01-2018, 02:12 AM
Not to my knowledge, the good has been repainted and the bed sides were repaired, but this was on the top of the cab, almost thinking micro etching after looking at some pics, i can’t catch anything with my nail

How bad was it before you polished it?

Eldorado2k
12-01-2018, 02:37 AM
Is it a GM truck? I don’t know if it’s just a GM thing, but I’ve noticed that they sometimes use a different kind of paint or different method of painting on the horizontal panels of some vehicles.. Whatever it is I’ve seen the roofs of some vehicles and sometimes even the hoods paint is of lower quality than the vertical panels as far as shine and clarity. It could also be due to the fact that the horizontal panels, especially the roof takes the most abuse over time. I think it could be a combination of both.

I’ve always wanted to know the correct answer as to why the paint on the hood could be different from the paint on the fender of a car.. Is it because the hood is made of a different kind metal and therefore couldn’t be painted the same way? The paint on my brothers Cadillac CTS was like that.. Fender shined like a mirror, the hood shined, but you couldn’t see reflections anywhere near like you could on the vertical panels of the car. It was completely different paint from the factory.

Strong66
12-01-2018, 04:19 AM
My guess would be solvent pop, it could be wet sanded and polished out.

If it's factory clear, be cautious you don't have many mils to work with.

itsgn
12-01-2018, 07:51 AM
To me it looks like the typical aforementioned solvent pop of a repainted surface. Did you measure paint thickness? If yes, what was it?

Similar defects can also sometimes arise when one is heavily overheating the paint while polishing it, without burning through it.

Eldorado2k
12-01-2018, 08:45 AM
To me it looks like the typical aforementioned solvent pop of a repainted surface.

Similar defects can also sometimes arise when one is heavily overheating the paint while polishing it, without burning through it.

It may look like solvent pop of a repainted surface, but according to the information OP provided that’s not the case here because that panel has never been re painted.

And while similar defects may arise when overheating occurs during polishing, he said he can see these same defects in areas he has yet to polish...


So as far as his situation goes: Have a look at the factory paint on the hood of my 02’ Cadillac.

https://uploads.tapatalk-cdn.com/20181201/e266f945d66ad9c1997efb1fe9c1a6f8.jpg

Now have a closer look...

https://uploads.tapatalk-cdn.com/20181201/5011c1293a8f339253d1a512d7e310f2.jpg

Zoom in even closer and it looks alot like the factory paint in the OP.

https://uploads.tapatalk-cdn.com/20181201/dbe2fefdeb0a593066e169f428ad3f66.jpg

Now look at the factory paint on the vertical panels of the same car. This paint is different. Compared to the paint they used on the horizontal panels this paint is perfect.

https://uploads.tapatalk-cdn.com/20181201/4ad0ce85aa11055f9726748a93589b3f.jpg

Does this somehow indicate that some panels on my car have been re painted? No, and I have no doubt about it. This is normal. Like I said earlier, my brothers Cadillac was the same way, I’ve also seen Mercedes Benz gray/silver factory paint look the same exact way on their horizontal panels. I wish I knew the reason why they do it...

Does it mean the horizontal panels don’t shine? Of course not.

https://uploads.tapatalk-cdn.com/20181201/e1e4f0bad86130d73e3ccbe97deec6e7.jpg

It only looks like that under close examination. I could clearly see it as I was polishing my car.. Does it bother me? No not really, because there’s nothing I can do about it. It’s the way they chose to paint it from the factory, combined with many years of neglect by the previous owners.

bigmackmiller
12-01-2018, 09:15 AM
Maybe it is a factory flaw then with the truck being from a similar era @ GM, and or clear coat etching from age. This truck is a 2001 Chevrolet 2500HD, to my knowledge the hood, and bedsides are the only repainted areas. I too am seeing this on the horizontal surfaces. The pic was taken on the roof of the truck, but it is apparent on curved body lines right under the driver side window as well that have a horizontal projection. Unfortunately I don't have a MIL gauge to see how much we have to work with that would allow me to wet sand the areas, but would consider purchasing one if you wouldn't mind recommending one. If the factory clear is thin to begin with I may only have to option of having it fixed at the body shop.

Eldorado2k
12-01-2018, 09:18 AM
Maybe it is a factory flaw then with the truck being from a similar era @ GM, and or clear coat etching from age. This truck is a 2001 Chevrolet 2500HD. I too am seeing this on the horizontal surfaces.

I knew it.[emoji57]lol.

MikeC78
12-01-2018, 12:48 PM
Hard to tell from the pics, but it might be clear overspray from a sloppy body shop. I've seen it many times before. Can you feel the 'dots' when you run your hand over it?

SWETM
12-01-2018, 02:34 PM
Hard to tell from the pics, but it might be clear overspray from a sloppy body shop. I've seen it many times before. Can you feel the 'dots' when you run your hand over it?

Was my first thought too. But if he can not feel the dots. And you can test it with the baggie test to get a more sensitive feel on them. Then Eldorado2K findings is interesting to hear and can suit to your situation as well.

itsgn
12-01-2018, 04:42 PM
It may look like solvent pop of a repainted surface, but according to the information OP provided that’s not the case here because that panel has never been re painted.
To his knowledge. Which is limited, because he is obviously not the first owner of the car. But even if the car would be brand new, dealerships sometimes "silently" have cars corrected, for ex. when they get damaged in transport. And sometimes cars overgo correction already in the factory. Just saying.


And while similar defects may arise when overheating occurs during polishing, he said he can see these same defects in areas he has yet to polish...
Again, that doesn't mean that nobody has polished the car previously. For all we (don't) know it could have been polished already not only once, but several times.

That said I did not say what the cause of the defect was (because, well, I can't know for sure either), just what it looked like to me. And I asked specifically for paint thickness measurement to get more hints (or possibly even confirmation) on whether the area has been repainted or corrected previously. Until we get at least that, there's really nothing we could go by, and it's equally probable that it's solvent pop from a repaint or a result of clear coat overheating from improper polishing than that it's a factory defect.

Paint thickness measurement would also be important to determine the possible course(s) of treatment, and to see whether there are actually any options other than a repaint, obviously.

Eldorado2k
12-01-2018, 05:01 PM
To his knowledge. Which is limited, because he is obviously not the first owner of the car. But even if the car would be brand new, dealerships sometimes "silently" have cars corrected, for ex. when they get damaged in transport. And sometimes cars overgo correction already in the factory. Just saying.


Again, that doesn't mean that nobody has polished the car previously.

That said I did not say what the cause of the defect was (because, well, I can't know for sure either), just what it looked like to me. And I asked specifically for paint thickness measurement to get more hints (or possibly even confirmation) on whether the area has been repainted or corrected previously.

We’re not talking about whether it’s been previously corrected, we’re talking about whether or not that panel has been re painted, and according to him it hasn’t.

And yea, I know you said that’s what it “looked” like... It can look like whatever, but in this situation it doesn’t apply because that particular panel hasn’t been repainted.

I’ll go out on a limb and say most if not all people on this forum have a pretty good idea about whether or not their vehicles have been re painted or not. You could let me drive any vehicle for a week and I would be able to tell you what and where it’s been re painted even without the use of paint meter. I’m sure I’d be able to, wouldn’t you? It’s not that hard.

Farmallluvr
12-01-2018, 05:54 PM
Looks like environmental damage to me ,maybe a waterspot acid etch or burnt in water spots,most of the GM paint flaws I've seen in the last 15 to 20 years resemble this.
I work at a GM dealer and see plenty but l am looking at it on my little phone screen,I look when I get home on the PC I'll re evaluate