- Mar 1, 2000
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You're going to need something abrasive.
I would start with Macguire's car polish and a soft Terry cloth. If that doesn't get it, shake a little baking soda on the cloth. Work in a small area and see if you can get it to budge.
I don't know. Totally depends on the surface and the paint and the yellow plastic. You may be able to scratch some with a fingernail and see if it comes off. A buffer may be successful just by repetition. FWIW, I'm not an autobody guy.That doesn't sound overly promising![]()
I won't discourage the OP from trying it, and it might not hurt.I've used the Meguiar's Scratch X product to remove worse scratches than what you have in the pics.
Get this:
Meguiar's® ScratchX® 2.0, G10307, 7 oz., Liquid | Meguiar's
www.meguiars.com
And some microfiber pads. Try on a small area first to see how it turns out. Don't put too much pressure, just light pressure and let the compound do the work.
So....Kentucky Jelly is obviously from Kentucky. Where's WD40 from? Western Delaware?I'd spray WD40 on it then scrub with a rag. Wash then use a polishing compound.
Despite the name of the product, you don't actually use it on deep scratches that goes down to the primer or the metal. And actually, clear coat is what's underneath the yellow. You have the paint and then a clear coat layer on top of it. I wouldn't recommend just any rubbing compound because some can be harmful to the clear coat. The Meguiar's stuff is essentially a rubbing compound but safe to use on clear coat.I won't discourage the OP from trying it, and it might not hurt.
But she doesn't have "scratches". What we see in those pics one would call "paint transfer" -- or "plastic transfer" if the pylons were unpainted plastic. Underneath the yellow is unscarred paint. So I still recommend Rubbing Compound. The OP can try Polishing Compound, but it will take longer and require more elbow-grease.
Actually, Meguiar's is the brand I mostly used last summer and on my Trooper's roof. I think it has the property of the abrasive particles getting smaller as it's applied, so that you start with a more aggressive abrasive, and end up with a polishing-compound grade abrasive.Despite the name of the product, you don't actually use it on deep scratches that goes down to the primer or the metal. And actually, clear coat is what's underneath the yellow. You have the paint and then a clear coat layer on top of it. I wouldn't recommend just any rubbing compound because some can be harmful to the clear coat. The Meguiar's stuff is essentially a rubbing compound but safe to use on clear coat.
[Also in response to olds -- post before yours]^ Yes agreed, rubbing compound is close to clay with sand mixed into it, is not suitable for any paint with a clearcoat on top. NONE. In any case where a clearcoat is that bad, it's time to wet sand it. It is not bad at all yet, there is no indication the clearcoat under the plastic transfer is bad.
Polishing compound can vary, but the thing is, there is no polishing here. You're trying to remove a foreign object. If after you remove it, there is some haze on the clearcoat, then it is time to try polishing compound.
If you are in a hurry (no patience), you could use polishing compound, put on a cotton swab in a drill/etc and be precise to only work on the area where the plastic transfer is, but what you don't want to do is start in a larger area than the transfer and wear the clearcoat over the whole area just to get the target removed.
DO try gently heating and rubbing the plastic to see if it comes off before anything more abrasive. There is no reason to subject any wider area to abrasion than necessary, unless you're too impatient for your own good. Do not think in terms of what comes off in a minute versus an hour, or later you will spend even more time trying to correct it. Slow and steady...
At the same time, after you get the plastic off, if that area is abrased you might then need a polishing compound to feather that into the rest, or a clearcoat added and then feathered... depends on how bad the damage to the clearcoat is once it's removed.
I'm suggesting that you probably don't have to do any of that damage, that before I broke out the rubbing compound, I'd even try scraping it with a plastic credit card/etc, precisely. Again, heat may help.
[Also in response to olds -- post before yours]
I won't disagree entirely, nor do I want to start a p***ing contest about it.
Rubbing compound is recommended by my PaintScratch paint supplier for treating clearcoat 30 days after it was sprayed on -- when it will still be a bit soft.
3M Microfine Wet-or-Dry sandpaper? Or one of the polishing-pad products?I've used 3M Microfine for literally years when removing remnants of things like the OP mentioned.
My bad, it's Finesse-It3M Microfine Wet-or-Dry sandpaper? Or one of the polishing-pad products?
...
Don't ever think too hard about any of my posts. They're a mix of me being genuinely trying to help folks and me trying to make jokes that may not make sense.Not sure what Scarpozzi means. I will ponder it.
I apparently referred to Homerboy as "she". Don't know why. Perhaps I assumed a gender because this is a really easy fix, and I probably cling to hold-over myths about women who think -- when a car starts making noises -- that if you drive it long enough it will fix itself.
Sure -- you could try WD40 to see if that will loosen the yellow plastic or paint transfer, and then apply polishing compound.
I only recommend a quick application of Rubbing Compound because I've had enough experience with it over the last year -- for instance, as the last step after removing the rust and repainting my brother's truck using epoxy primer to seal it; it's the recommended treatment after a 30-day lapse following a clearcoat application. I'd also used it on my Trooper's roof after applying a compound that reverses oxidation. It takes a lot of rubbing compound to damage paint -- just noticeably less than polishing compound. The OP is not likely to rub out the clear-coat by applying it to the limited area of the yellow streaks.
So again -- sure -- try the WD40 and then go to work with Polishing Compound. Same stuff, but a finer abrasive and less aggressive treatment of the clearcoat and paint. Therefore, more elbow grease required, and patience as well.
I continued to entertain the latter possibility . . .Don't ever think too hard about any of my posts. They're a mix of me being genuinely trying to help folks and me trying to make jokes that may not make sense.