Quote:
Originally Posted by 2heeldrive
Well, OK. I guess I've been doing it wrong for decades. Good to know!
... I'm old and set in my ways though and I'm used to being wrong, so why change now?
I have several 100% cotton towels just for drying. I have yet to get a "swirl". The secret is an absolutely clean and grit free towel. If a towel ever touches the ground, it gets thrown away. I also use a light touch and drape the towel over flat surfaces.
And I'm lazy and use a pressure washer (I know, horrors!). The only way to get the film off is to wipe it off.
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I knew a guy like you who claimed that his paint was swirl free. I asked him to bring me his car. With the naked eye, his paint did look presentable to anyone who didn't know how to look at paint. This is what he saw, and what most people would claim was swirl free paint, no matter what evil that he was doing to his paint:
However, this is what I SAW.
That's the thing about hookers. They all look different and no matter what they look like, there's always someone out there who will find them attractive. No matter what. But I learned from all the time I spent cruising Hollywood Blvd that there is a reason that some hookers only hang out on the dark corners. There's no telling what a little light might reveal.
By the way, I was nice enough to show him what his paint could look like if he took the time to treat it right. His daughter was all for that since she was going to inherit his car, and made him buy everything he needed to correct the error of his ways. I love working on black cars because they are the benchmark that show just how good you are at correcting paint.
Until I see a guy's paint in the "right light", I'm just going to assume that he parks his car on some dark corners.


