Mcguires Clear Plastic Cleaner/polish
i get this plastic polishing assortment of bottles from www.usplastics.com
comes with cleaner, polisher, and abrasive liquid for deep polishing.
comes with cleaner, polisher, and abrasive liquid for deep polishing.
Thread Starter
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Joined: Feb 2009
Posts: 11,732
Likes: 5
From: Leesville, Louisiana
Vehicle: 2001 Hyundai Tiburon
QUOTE (Blue Blaze @ Jan 13 2006, 03:11 PM)
hmm I am going to have to try this stuff. I always wondered about plastic cleaners if they would just be to strong to take the paint right off.
dunno about the paint, but i do know it's a two stage process. one cleans and removes scratches and the other fills in what's left over in scratches.
Tibby01: is that a clear polish?
here is pics of what it can do and how to use it.
QUOTE (yup im joee)
got off another forum, searched here and didnt have it, so i thought it might help here
* mothers polish can be found at most auto stores, even wal mart has them sometimes*
*note* only polish hard plastic. it will turn into powder when sanded. the softer plastic will not powder and will be difficult to polish. if it is flexable it is to soft. there are not a lot of things on the car that are hard plastic. most of the interior is soft plastic. test on unseen areas first.
*note* do not use anything other than hand sanding. machine sanding mayl make the plastic melt.
materials:
-plastic polish
-sandpaper (600g-1000g)
-cotton polishing cloth

this is to show you how to polish plastic in and around your car. this is the plastic blank in the dash trim. to polish it, begin by sanding the texture off of it with 600g sandpaper til the texture is smooth. then follow with 1000g to knock it down some more and smooth it further.

this is how it'll look after sanding

now you are ready to use the plastic polish. apply it to the polishing cloth and buff til all the fine scratches disappear and a reflective finish appears. it should look like this when done.

heres a polished OEM blinker

plastic polish also works good on corner lens, tailights, scratched cd's, gauge clusters, ect. later
* mothers polish can be found at most auto stores, even wal mart has them sometimes*
*note* only polish hard plastic. it will turn into powder when sanded. the softer plastic will not powder and will be difficult to polish. if it is flexable it is to soft. there are not a lot of things on the car that are hard plastic. most of the interior is soft plastic. test on unseen areas first.
*note* do not use anything other than hand sanding. machine sanding mayl make the plastic melt.
materials:
-plastic polish
-sandpaper (600g-1000g)
-cotton polishing cloth

this is to show you how to polish plastic in and around your car. this is the plastic blank in the dash trim. to polish it, begin by sanding the texture off of it with 600g sandpaper til the texture is smooth. then follow with 1000g to knock it down some more and smooth it further.

this is how it'll look after sanding

now you are ready to use the plastic polish. apply it to the polishing cloth and buff til all the fine scratches disappear and a reflective finish appears. it should look like this when done.

heres a polished OEM blinker

plastic polish also works good on corner lens, tailights, scratched cd's, gauge clusters, ect. later
Thread Starter
Moderator


Joined: Feb 2009
Posts: 11,732
Likes: 5
From: Leesville, Louisiana
Vehicle: 2001 Hyundai Tiburon
I'm left in absoloute bewilderment. i can't believe plastic can get that shiny... i'm marching my ass out to my car right now to get the radio surround and shifter surround... pix to come.
ok, here's the pix.. it made quite a difference in reflectivity. i'd recommend doing this if you have some good elbow grease. i tested just 600 grit sand paper without 1000 grit sand paper in an inconspicuous area and it didn't work well at all. these are the results without sandpaper.
before
[attachment=189:attachment]
and after
Attachment 104
Attachment 105
that has NO armorall on it... yet.
ok, here's the pix.. it made quite a difference in reflectivity. i'd recommend doing this if you have some good elbow grease. i tested just 600 grit sand paper without 1000 grit sand paper in an inconspicuous area and it didn't work well at all. these are the results without sandpaper.
before
[attachment=189:attachment]
and after
Attachment 104
Attachment 105
that has NO armorall on it... yet.


