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  1. #1
    Newbie Member Whacky's Avatar
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    How to best remove a wheel coating??

    Hey all,
    Just a quick question to see what people may recommend.

    What would be a safe and effective way to remove a coating that was applied to a wheel?

    Reason why I ask:
    I have a 911 GTS with centerlock wheels. When I had the car professionally paint corrected, wrapped, and coated a few months ago, I asked them to perform the standard "wheels off" service, and coat the inside and outside of the wheels as well as the calipers etc.

    Well the detailer, who came highly reviewed and recommended, didn't feel comfortable taking off the Porsche centerlock wheels. I guess there was a recent issue in the shop? or his new wheel guy wasn't comfortable with it, or didnt have the right torque wrench? I am not entirely sure. But I was just told they couldn't take the wheels off.

    So he coated the visible outside of the wheels only, leaving the inner rim and calipers uncoated.
    FYI, he coated the external car with Gtechniq Crystal Serum Ultra followed by EXO. I am not sure what he coated the external wheels with, but I can find out pretty easily.

    Which leads us to now.
    The 911 GTS Non-PCCB rotors make tons and tons of brake dust, and it looks pretty weird having external surface appear coated (albeit not even that great a a job I feel), and the inner part with no coating or protection at all.

    SO I went ahead and bought the right torque wrench, and the right jack stands, and have prepared myself to put my 911 up on all four jacks and take the centerlock wheels off myself.

    This way, I can pick which product I want to coat the wheels with, and I can take my time, decontaminate, clean, and prepare the wheel thoroughly and be as meticulous about the process as I want in order to provide the best protection to these awesome wheels given the amount of dust they will encounter in their lifetime.


    So that leads me to the question.

    Is there a good, safe, and effective way to remove the current external coating applied to the wheels so I can prepare the surface for the full wheel coating? Ideally without having to pull out any form of polisher, compounding, etc given they are the matte black Porsche GTS wheels and I feel machine polishing/compounding them is a bad idea.

    Dish soaps? Car soaps? Alkaline products? Other car products? etc.



    Any suggestions would be kindly appreciated.

    Thanks all
    W

  2. #2
    Super Member Eldorado2k's Avatar
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    How to best remove a wheel coating??

    I don’t mean to get off topic, but until just recently you weren’t able to remove your own wheels on a Porsche? What would happen if you got a flat tire? I’m guessing these are aftermarket wheels?

  3. #3
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    Re: How to best remove a wheel coating??

    A special Porsche $$$ tool is needed to take the wheels off or at least a 42" breaker bar and split torque wrench. Either way, significant $$

    My friend w/ a GT3 has the same but his car came w/ the tool.

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  5. #4
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    How to best remove a wheel coating??

    Quote Originally Posted by howardm4 View Post
    A special Porsche $$$ tool is needed to take the wheels off or at least a 42" breaker bar and split torque wrench. Either way, significant $$

    My friend w/ a GT3 has the same but his car came w/ the tool.
    Most Porsche’s don’t use centerlocks and, in general, owners of Porsche’s with centerlocks don’t DIY stuff or invest hundreds for the removal tool and very high duty torque wrench. If you get a flat, you normally get a flat bed tow.

    That said, the best way to remove the coating is to give the wheels a good wash and then use a mild abrasive polish on the entire wheel. By hand should be fine. After, wipe the wheels down with diluted IPA, CarPro Eraser, or like product.


    Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

  6. #5
    Super Member TMQ's Avatar
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    Re: How to best remove a wheel coating??

    Hummm..If it were me---I'll get the wheels off.

    Do a deep cleaning, the outer rims and inner barrels.

    Clay barrels off, wipe everything with paint prep.

    Then coat...

    I wouldn't worry too much about getting old coating off. Just get it really clean and paint prep it. Then coat.

    Don't get too stressed or overthink the process...Just clean and coat---you'll be fine.

    Tom
    Mr Tommy's
    Wash, Buff, Wax
    Website: mrtommyshine.com

  7. #6
    Super Member Eldorado2k's Avatar
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    Re: How to best remove a wheel coating??

    So just pray you never get a flat because even AAA can’t change it. Lol. Man that sucks.

  8. #7
    Newbie Member Whacky's Avatar
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    Re: How to best remove a wheel coating??

    So the wheels are standard Porsche 911 GTS wheels. Matte black. Centerlocks. Personally, I love the look.
    However, its definitely a pain in rear for Porsche gearheads due to the ~$400 torque wrench/breaker bar combo usually recommended to get off the wheels. Let alone any cost that goes into making sure you have adequate jackstands that will actually work to jack up the low profile, difficult jack-up 991.2
    So yes, costs build up for the DIY job, but I want to be able to take off my own wheels in the future, perform my own service, install my own modifications....etc.



    That being said, getting the wheels off isnt the issue.
    Removing the coating is.
    is it even necessary to worry about? I dont want to try to add a coating ontop of another coating of different manufacturers and not get good results.

    From my understanding, preperation is everything. And if I am going to the additional cost and time to remove my own centerlock wheels, I definitely want to make sure I do it right.

    So couple questions
    1. I heard doing claybar on external surface to matt/flatte rims could be a bad idea, introduce more problems than it stolves? Just wanted to confirm this.
    I do plan on claybaring the inner barrell, but the outside surface is where the coating is applied, and I don't want to cause any issues. ANy one have experience with this? Any difference between claybar and autoscrub?

    2. Anyone care to recommend a mild abrasive polish that wont mare the external matte surface? And/Or actually ruin or change the matte look of the wheels?
    I only have jescar compounding agent and sonax perfect finish on hand for my paint.


    My initial plan was to remove all wheels, thoroughly foam wash, then APC/wheel cleaner/Iron X multiple times, then claybar inner drum, then Eraser and allow to dry, then coat, cure, coat, cure, reinstall.

  9. #8
    Super Member FUNX650's Avatar
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    Re: How to best remove a wheel coating??

    Quote Originally Posted by Whacky View Post
    So that leads me to the question.

    Is there a good, safe, and effective way
    to remove the current external coating
    applied to the wheels so I can prepare
    the surface for the full wheel coating?

    Ideally without having to pull out any form
    of polisher, compounding, etc given they are
    the matte black Porsche GTS wheels
    and I feel machine polishing/compounding
    them is a bad idea.

    Any suggestions would be kindly appreciated.
    IMO:
    You definitely don’t want to use any type
    of abrasives/abrasive processes on matte
    black vehicle components.

    With that in mind, I’ll suggest that the
    following product may be one of the best
    bets for safely accomplishing your above
    listed task:
    Dr. Beasley's Matte Paint Cleanser


    •Additionally:
    -Since Dr. Beasley’s is represented on AGO’s
    forum, I’ll also suggest to contact them for
    further instructions/recommendations (send
    them a copy of your OP) via AGO’s PM system:
    https://www.autogeekonline.net/forum...=newpm&u=92953


    Bob
    "Be wary of the man who urges an action in which he himself incurs no risk."
    ~Joaquin de Setanti

  10. Likes TMQ, SWETM, DetailedByPrecision liked this post
  11. #9
    Newbie Member Whacky's Avatar
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    Re: How to best remove a wheel coating??

    This definitely seems like a viable option.
    I've never used the product before.

    Thanks for the advice, I reached out to Dr. Beasleys to see if that matte paint cleaner would be safe/effective for the wheels.

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  13. #10
    Super Member TMQ's Avatar
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    Re: How to best remove a wheel coating??

    Quote Originally Posted by FUNX650 View Post
    IMO:
    You definitely don’t want to use any type
    of abrasives/abrasive processes on matte
    black vehicle components.

    With that in mind, I’ll suggest that the
    following product may be one of the best
    bets for safely accomplishing your above
    listed task:
    Dr. Beasley's Matte Paint Cleanser


    •Additionally:
    -Since Dr. Beasley’s is represented on AGO’s
    forum, I’ll also suggest to contact them for
    further instructions/recommendations (send
    them a copy of your OP) via AGO’s PM system:
    https://www.autogeekonline.net/forum...=newpm&u=92953


    Bob
    Bingo..That's it.

    Do what FunX650 says.

    Use matte cleaner by Dr Beasley's. Or use this---https://www.autogeek.net/matte-finish-cleaner-protectant.html.

    Clean wheels first---use iron remover to remove brake dust, wash and use matte cleaner and then do paint prep to remove protectant from matte cleaners...

    Then coat it...

    I did not realized your wheels were matte. I would not use clay on those.

    Tom
    Mr Tommy's
    Wash, Buff, Wax
    Website: mrtommyshine.com

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