2009 S5 Revived from a "Detailers" Work...

imported_d00t

New member
This one was an absolute PAIN and PLEASURE to work on all at the same time. For the first time ever, both parts of AC Detailing were present for a detail! So it was really nice to cut working "time" in half. We still put around 35 hours in to the car, but it was done over the course of 2 days, instead of 3-4.



I'll explain the issues as we go along. But to start off, it was a beautiful two days in Sacramento with the highs being around 68 and breezy! The car is an '09 S5 White/Black interior, on Phantom Black exterior. The Phantom Black reminds me a lot of the BMW Carbon Black, as it has a nice blue metalic flake to it, but the blue isn't as prominent on the S5 as the BMW, very muted, very beautiful :).



On to the write-up!



First off, as usual, was the wheels. They were first rinsed down, filtered with DI water because as some may know, Sac water is EXTREMELY hard. It's like chlorine from a pool :P. So the wheels were rinsed, then sprayed with P21s Wheel Gel, while the tires/wheel wells got P21s TAW. Every thing was agitated with a soon-to-be-released Gloss-It Soft tip Wheel Brush, and a boars hair wheel brush, while the tires were agitated with a Meguiars Versa Angle Brush.



The owner has like 5 sets of wheels, and while detailing the car he had Audi RS4 rims on it.



Before:



DSC02074.jpg




DSC02075.jpg




DSC02087.jpg




DSC02088.jpg




Once the wheels were done, I moved on to a pre-rinse. It's spring time, and so the bugs in the central valley were out in full swing, with the car showing a lot of reminence of what used to live around here..



DSC02083.jpg




DSC02084.jpg




DSC02085.jpg




The paint was further inspected, and it honestly didn't look TOO bad, but the owner wanted it as close to perfect as possible (within scheduling means) and he wasn't satisfied by the previous attempts.



Some RIDS...



DSC02077.jpg




DSC02078.jpg




It was really hard to capture, but on the rear C pillar, where it goes in to the rear quarter, there was a LOT of wool pad marring in that area on both sides, and some on the rear bumper.



DSC02080.jpg




DSC02082.jpg






But other than that, I figured it shouldn't be too hard. Because of the super hard water in Sac, and the fact that my resin cartriges were on their last legs, after foaming the car with a high dilution of Chemical Guys' Citrus Wash & Clear to strip old wax, it was rinsed, pulled in, then ONR'd dry.



DSC02092.jpg




The engine bay was fairly clean, just getting a quick degreasing on the stop covers, and then wiped with ONR, and protected with 303 Aerospace Protectant.



DSC02089.jpg




DSC02090.jpg




After that was complete I assessed the amount of contaminants in the paint. I found only the horizontal panels really needed to be clayed, so the hood, windshield, roof, back glass, and trunk lid were clayed with Riccardo Yellow clay and LUBER as Clay Lube.



Before I started to polish:



DSC02094.jpg




Sorry, that's the best pic I got of the marring, on the halogens, and it's out of focus. The halogens and 220lumen LED barely picked up anything, so it was back and forth in and out of the garage after every test combo. And I went through them ALL. KNOWING the KBRM, and KNOWING the Audi Hard clear, I started where everyone would. SIP+3M UK Yellow...:hm . Then moved on to 3M UK FCP+Orange Uber.... :hm . THEN on to the KBRM with Meg's Yellow so1o wool, and brought it outside.. to NO AVAIL. I was starting to get a little confused.. but knew I had one more chance. I got out the burgundy megs wool and went at it. Here's after just one pass, and finishing down with M205+ LC Flat Black pad on the Flex DA:



DSC02095.jpg




DSC02097.jpg




As you can see there's a couple fait holograms left over. Why it took SO much to cut, and couldn't finish down was later atributed to the M205+Black pad not having enough cut to get out the wool pad marring, which was solved by switching to the White LC Flat pad. That left the finish near 100% perfect in 3 steps (I ended up doing to passes of M105+Burgundy wool to ensure all RIDS were removed). The only problem was the hood. I couldn't capture them on camera, but there was about 3-4 LONG RIDS that remained after everything, I'm assuming the dealership or the previous detailer installed these by poor wash techniques with a rock or something in the wash mitt.



Here's will working the Flex DA with M205+LC Flat White pad:



DSC02101.jpg




And me working the KBRM:



DSC02102.jpg




While Will was finishing with the Flex DA, I was moving on to the interior. It was quite soiled, and I had to pay specific attention to the drivers seat, as you'll soon see...



DSC02105.jpg




DSC02106.jpg




DSC02111.jpg




Rear area:



DSC02115.jpg




DSC02118.jpg




DSC02124.jpg




Drivers side:



DSC02121.jpg






The carpets were first order of business. I vacuumed them, and then cleaned them using a swissvax leather brush, with CG Citrus pad cleaner (works AMAZING on carpets--learned this straight from Paul @ CG) (afters in a sec).



DSC02126.jpg




Then I turned my attention to the leather. The seats are white :yikes: . And I was asked to pay a lot of attention to them, do get most, if not all, dye transfer from the jeans. So I went at it with the Leather Masters Strong cleaner first, then Leather Vital, and finished off with protection cream.



DSC02128.jpg


(only seat bottom is)
 
The door jambs were polished with ZAIO, as well as the interior carbon fiber, and the navi screen:



DSC02134.jpg




The Interior plastic was cleaned with 1z Cockpick Premium, and followed up with 303 Aerospace Protectant.



Other odds and ends included the exhaust tips which received Mothers Mag&Aluminum Polish:



Left done, right not:



DSC02131.jpg




Once Will had finished the final polishing it was pulled outside to get pressure rinsed to get rid of all the dust. This was the condition of the paint PRE-LSP, as I figured we wouldn't have Sun post-LSP (which I was right :P ).



DSC02135.jpg




DSC02136.jpg




DSC02137.jpg




No unfinished wool-pad marring here:



DSC02138.jpg




DSC02139.jpg


(excuse the tape residue.. it WAS cleaned off :p)



DSC02141.jpg




Once it was pulled back inside, it was dried off with the leaf blower, and then blotted dry. The wheels and windshield Will polished with Jeff's Werkstat Prime+Acrylic, and then finally wiped down with Acrylic Glos. The Tires recieved Megs HD 3:1. The weather seals got 1z gummi pfledge.



LSP was Danase Wet Glaze, topped by two coats of Rubbish Boy's Original Edition, and then a final wipedown with Gloss-It Gloss Enhancer.



A slew of afters, including interior and engine bay:



DSC02144.jpg




DSC02145.jpg




DSC02143.jpg




DSC02148.jpg




DSC02159.jpg




DSC02160.jpg




DSC02162.jpg




DSC02164.jpg




DSC02177.jpg




DSC02178.jpg




DSC02165.jpg




DSC02167.jpg




DSC02168.jpg




DSC02171.jpg




DSC02173.jpg




DSC02174.jpg




DSC02176.jpg






Alright! Thanks for looking everyone.



As alwyas, C/C welcome!



:wavey
 
Oh how I love this car! great work! Someone is going to comment on the 16th pic from the bottom...get ready! Looks great though!
 
great work i really liked that 50/50 of the leather seat! you guys are producing nice details lately!! good job i nejoyed the pics and write up!
 
Twista616 said:
Oh how I love this car! great work! Someone is going to comment on the 16th pic from the bottom...get ready! Looks great though!



Thanks! I guess I don't see what you're looking at?



bufferbarry said:
great work i really liked that 50/50 of the leather seat! you guys are producing nice details lately!! good job i nejoyed the pics and write up!



Thank you! :)
 
nice work as always aaron! i really liked the 50/50 on the seat, how long did u spend to get them cleaned up?
 
My feelings were almost hurt until I realized that I used an orange CCS on this car in October. So it wasn't my wool pad marring that was being corrected.



The car looks good though!! Be very happy the customer went back to the Audi rims and not the non clear coated ones he had on it in October! They weren't fun at all!! Nick's a good guy so take care of him!!
 
Just a thought for the owner: Be careful how often you have the car polished. Eventually you are going to run out of clear coat and then life gets real ugly!! I detailed it in April and then again in October. If he had it detailed since October but before taking it to you then that is like four times in less than a year. Please make sure you let him know about this!! Thanks!!
 
mose said:
My feelings were almost hurt until I realized that I used an orange CCS on this car in October. So it wasn't my wool pad marring that was being corrected.



The car looks good though!! Be very happy the customer went back to the Audi rims and not the non clear coated ones he had on it in October! They weren't fun at all!! Nick's a good guy so take care of him!!



Not going to stir the pot, but thanks for the props. Nick is definitely a nice guy.
 
d00t said:
Not going to stir the pot, but thanks for the props. Nick is definitely a nice guy.



Can't see where there's a pot to be stirred!! If he wasn't happy with the detail I wish he would have told me that instead of telling me how happy he was!



I am glad he found someone to take care of him.
 
Very nice work! I love the car...phantom black is an amazing color. A few questions on a tangent, if you don't mind...



- Those are RS4 wheels? I ask because, as a fellow Audihead, I didn't know the rears would fit. The width & offset are really aggressive, and when you look at the "hips" on an RS4, you can really appreciate how far they'd stick out on another car. I ran RS4 replicas on my old Audi, and of course the same split-seven-spoke design can be had on S4's.



- Borla? Really? Do you know if those are just tips, or if he went with a Borla system for the car?



- Do you know his washing habits? I wonder if he runs it through an automated wash or something?



Just my curiosity at work - sorry for the tangent. Again, terrific work on this machine!
 
VroomVroom said:
Very nice work! I love the car...phantom black is an amazing color. A few questions on a tangent, if you don't mind...



- Those are RS4 wheels? I ask because, as a fellow Audihead, I didn't know the rears would fit. The width & offset are really aggressive, and when you look at the "hips" on an RS4, you can really appreciate how far they'd stick out on another car. I ran RS4 replicas on my old Audi, and of course the same split-seven-spoke design can be had on S4's.



- Borla? Really? Do you know if those are just tips, or if he went with a Borla system for the car?



- Do you know his washing habits? I wonder if he runs it through an automated wash or something?



Just my curiosity at work - sorry for the tangent. Again, terrific work on this machine!



Thanks! The RS4 rims fit on the S5 because the S5 has got some hips on her too :). Actually the offsets are a little TOO positive (not aggressive enough) for the car! :o



It's a custom piped exhaust, with borla tips.



No clue on washing habits. It has been to the dealer a couple of times though.



Thanks again!



Got_Leather said:
Great Detail Aaron. Glad your help came back. Sure does help. Any other info on the NSX you were telling me about?? Once again, good job.



Thanks a lot! I'm not sure I remember the NSX I was telling you about?
 
That car is gorgeous beyond words. Why would someone even look at the 6 Series or CLK/CL/SL/SLK?
 
mose said:
Just a thought for the owner: Be careful how often you have the car polished. Eventually you are going to run out of clear coat and then life gets real ugly!! I detailed it in April and then again in October. If he had it detailed since October but before taking it to you then that is like four times in less than a year. Please make sure you let him know about this!! Thanks!!



Running out of clear after 2 paint corrections :think: You could polish that car a dozen times and still be fine w/ the amount of clear taken off. Were not talking full wetsand jobs here so there really shouldnt be anything to worry about.



If your careful and polish properly, as Aaron clearly does, than only minimal amounts of clear are removed during correction and I know for a fact he uses a PTG to measure the paint before starting correction so there really shouldn't be any surprises next time he corrects that car.. and the time after that etc etc.



Nice work Aaron, car looks gleaming even in the dark:2thumbs:
 
dsms said:
Running out of clear after 2 paint corrections :think: You could polish that car a dozen times and still be fine w/ the amount of clear taken off. Were not talking full wetsand jobs here so there really shouldnt be anything to worry about.



If your careful and polish properly, as Aaron clearly does, than only minimal amounts of clear are removed during correction and I know for a fact he uses a PTG to measure the paint before starting correction so there really shouldn't be any surprises next time he corrects that car.. and the time after that etc etc.



Nice work Aaron, car looks gleaming even in the dark:2thumbs:



Thanks Dave, really appreciate it! I know it was in the dark and I was disappointed by that for sure! I'm not going to lie, every time I do a black car, I look at your A5 and say "that's the look I'm after". This one could have looked like that with proper lighting. Stock camera flash FTL.
 
d00t said:
Thanks Dave, really appreciate it! I know it was in the dark and I was disappointed by that for sure! I'm not going to lie, every time I do a black car, I look at your A5 and say "that's the look I'm after". This one could have looked like that with proper lighting. Stock camera flash FTL.



Two completely different colors, mine is brilliant black and this is metallic something or other... so the final outcome (even with an identical process) will look very different. Yes of course lighting makes a difference but now that the weather is getting better here in NJ I try my best to get the cars out in the sun as much as possible.



Man I hate NJ winters:grrr
 
Back
Top