Anyone know of any....

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RobM

Original Poster:

392 posts

291 months

Sunday 24th March 2002
quotequote all
Miracle polish ?

Some nice person decided to put a marker pen down the side of my chim. Took me over an hour to get it off but it looks like i may have upset the paintwork in some places Anyone know of anything which may help ?

>>> Edited by RobM on Sunday 24th March 15:06

kerniki

430 posts

289 months

Sunday 24th March 2002
quotequote all
Spray paint?

GreenV8S

30,475 posts

291 months

Sunday 24th March 2002
quotequote all
quote:

Spray paint?



Argh NO! Tee cut followed by lots of polish will get rid of most small marks. Othewise you are looking at touch-up paint or a local respray.

hertsbiker

6,371 posts

278 months

Sunday 24th March 2002
quotequote all
Was it indelable ink? isopropyl alcohol removes this, but try on a sample of paint first, incase it lifts the paint..

cheers.

RobM

Original Poster:

392 posts

291 months

Sunday 24th March 2002
quotequote all
Not sure what ink it was. Only way I could shift it was to get it wet and then get my nail on it. Looked ok when it was wet but when it dried the scratches came through. I'll try the t-cut & see what happens.

nonegreen

7,803 posts

277 months

Sunday 24th March 2002
quotequote all
quote:

Not sure what ink it was. Only way I could shift it was to get it wet and then get my nail on it. Looked ok when it was wet but when it dried the scratches came through. I'll try the t-cut & see what happens.



Can I suggest TCut is a bit harsh, go visit your local paint supplier and get his advice. There are better products on the market than TCut.

ninja_eli

1,525 posts

274 months

Monday 25th March 2002
quotequote all
One of the turtle wax colour magic jobs might help. It can help remove small scratches etc. You might have actually did the major damage yourself by using your nails to remove the ink. I've seen it done before!

Getting a local (friendly) bodyshop to give advice is not a bad idea either.

Regards

NoisyGriff

576 posts

275 months

Monday 25th March 2002
quotequote all
Just a thought, Rob.
I'm sure I have been told in the past to be very carefull playing with the paint on a metallic car. Yours clearly is. Metallic paints are dull until they are covered in a laquer. The laquer is not as thick as normal solid paint, so you do not have as much to 'cut' into.
There are products on the market made for metallic cars. Good luck.

Of course you could cover the rest of the car in marks and lines, like that God-awful Citroen Picasso thing on telly. I'd rather mix my sprouts with a slamming door than own one of those. Sorry. Bit of a free mini-rant there.

flying gibbon

2,244 posts

289 months

Monday 25th March 2002
quotequote all
SHOE POLISH!

Yes, I know it sounds crazy, but someone once told me that if a kid scribbles all over a photo you can get the biro or marker pen off with shoe polish. It sounds weird, but they showed me and it worked!

It's got to be worth a try!

Incidentally, anyone know of any other silly sounding remedies that work?

Fatboy

8,084 posts

279 months

Monday 25th March 2002
quotequote all
For marker pens, try using regular ethanol (vodka works quite well and won't damage most paints) Or if it's really stubborn, use acetone (nail varnish remover), But be very careful to test it on the paint first!!!

shoggoth1

815 posts

272 months

Monday 25th March 2002
quotequote all
Long time lurker, first time poster.

If you use permanent marker on a white board the way to get it off is to go over it with a dry marker (the things you're meant to use on whiteboards) and then wipe off as normal. The permanent ink comes off with the non-permanent ink. This does work, I've done it myself.

I assume it'll work on a car.

currymonster

3,933 posts

276 months

Monday 25th March 2002
quotequote all
quote:

Incidentally, anyone know of any other silly sounding remedies that work?



Vinegar is supposed to bring chrome up lovely.

ErnestM

11,621 posts

274 months

Monday 25th March 2002
quotequote all
Rob...

Looks to me like you were looking for help with the paint AFTER you were succesful in removing the marker (at least that is the way I read it).

What you may want to try is some sort of Glaze (if you were in the US I would recommend Mothers, but I hear Zymol works too). FYI, the purpose for using a glaze is to gently fill in or remove any topical swirl marks or scratches in the paint. You would of course want to follow up with a premium carnauba wax for the gloss.

ErnestM

Nightmare

5,230 posts

291 months

Monday 25th March 2002
quotequote all
Rob,

Would suggest the first thing to try is Autoglym super resin polish. It contains a gentle cutting agent, and if you apply it in short straight lines (NOT siwlrs as seen on karate kid!) it may well do the trick. If it wont get out slightly deeper scuffs, you can try their 'paint renovator' - which is a harsher cutting agent. NoisyGriff is absolutely right about t-cutting agents. Standard ones in Halfords tend to be a little excessive in my experience.

Hope that helps

cheers
Night

campbell

2,500 posts

290 months

Monday 25th March 2002
quotequote all
All I can say is that you must be a bit pissed
Try using a very damp cloth with the cutting agent, this will thin it out and reduce the amount of paint you will take off
Good luck, poor bugger

RobM

Original Poster:

392 posts

291 months

Monday 25th March 2002
quotequote all
Thanks for the polish tips chaps, I'll try em out this weekend if I can find them, Especialy the carnauba wax !! Have no idea what it is but it sounds great.

smeagol

1,947 posts

291 months

Tuesday 26th March 2002
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I thought Autoglym Super resin contained no cutting agent but a set of silcotes which break down tar, grease spots etc. Thats why Jaguar etc used it as polish I doubt they would use it on new cars if it had any cutting propertie.s

ErnestM

11,621 posts

274 months

Tuesday 26th March 2002
quotequote all
For all that are interested, here is why Carnauba wax is probably the best "top coat" to use when waxing your car...
www.mothers.com/carcare/carnaubahistory/carnauba.html

Very good stuff...

Cheers

ErnestM

mel

10,168 posts

282 months

Tuesday 26th March 2002
quotequote all
While we're on about carnauba waxes any readers from the US ever come across a range branded as "Formula 1" It's just I've got a garage load of the stuff which I fell across from a friend who had imported a container full with the view of making a few quid (apparently it was fairly cheap in the US). Only to fall foul of the fact he overlooked that Mr Ecclestein has the rights to the name in Europe basically look out on a market stall near you soon for some unsellable Carnauba.

ErnestM

11,621 posts

274 months

Tuesday 26th March 2002
quotequote all
Haven't heard of "Formula 1", but basically any wax that is a PURE Carnauba is one worth investigating (regardless of the brand name). Basically, the steps that you want to take to protect your finish are...

1. A "paint cleaner" of some sort to remove any embedded road deposits, bugs, etc that you can't get out with washing (once or twice per year)

2. A "Glaze" coat for filling in or removing scratch marks and swirls

3. The Carnauba for that show room finish and protection

If you spend at least as much time on the exterior of your car as you do on the engine maintenance, you will be rewarded with a car that not only runs well, but looks great too

If "Formula 1" is pure Carnauba, I would tout the many benefits of Carnauba when you go to sell it. (Maybe plaguerize the link I posted earlier). Carnauba lasts months, not just days...

Good luck with your sales efforts

ErnestM

>> Edited by ErnestM on Tuesday 26th March 14:30