christopher markley
04-19-2007, 05:37 PM
Something horrible got on the paint on my 2007 titanium silver BMW. I had parked it for a week in the Philadelphia airport parking garage, to keep it protected from the weather. When I got home, I noticed a horrible goober stain on the hood, and I'm assuming it got there at the airport since I didn't notice anything flying onto on the road. It appears that a big plop of liquid hit it on the flat center of the hood near the windshield. Some of the plop ran and left a trail down toward the grill. It is an opaque gray, flat, chalky color. The surface texture feels like a slate blackboard to the fingernail. It is clearly raised above the paint layer, and doesn't seem to have etched or eaten into the paint. I was able to remove a good bit of the surface with a clay bar lubricated with detailing spray, but a very ugly, still mostly opaque stubborn thin layer remains. I can very carefully and gently scratch it with my fingernail and remove this stuff. It would take forever to remove this jumbo pancake size paint stain with the fingernail method, the feeling of a slate blackboard on my fingernails would kill me eventually, and I don't think my fingernails are too good for the paint. But I don't want to attack it to violently with the clay bar, since at this point the clay seems to have removed the stuff well but isn't taking it down much further. I also don't want to use a cleaner wax or a polish, because I don't want to remove ANY clearcoat on this brand-new car. Everybody says, take it to the dealer or a detail shop, but I'm afraid they'd just hit it aggressively with a polisher and remove a bunch of clear. I've done a good bit of high quality custom paintwork on vintage motorcycles that I've restored, and I know enough to respect good paint and treat it right and not rush a job or do a job with the wrong approach or tools.
What would you all recommend?
Oh, I tried letting a microfiber rag soaked in quality car was liquid sit on the contamination, but it didn't loosen it. Neither did a good quality bug/tar remover. Thanks in advance for any ideas.
What would you all recommend?
Oh, I tried letting a microfiber rag soaked in quality car was liquid sit on the contamination, but it didn't loosen it. Neither did a good quality bug/tar remover. Thanks in advance for any ideas.