Work continued by applied
Zaino AIO to the door shuts, on both the body side and the door side. Care was taken to make sure all area’s where lightly hand polished and covered.
The day was running late but Brian stuck around to help clean all the interior glass using
Meguiars’ Glass Cleaner, some unique tools, and a
Ultimate Microfiber’s Glass Polishing Cloth.
The last surface to be deep cleansed and cleaned was the large amount of black leather hide in the interior.
Leatherique Rejuvinator Oil was hand applied to the hide and worked in. The oil would be allowed to set for two days to fully saturate the thickness of the hide and clean it from the inside out, gently floating out harmful human body oils and other damaging impurities.
The plastic lenses of the headlamps and taillights where slightly hazed from micro scratches. The headlamps also had light scratching from days at the track.
Menzerna PO106ff was used with a
4 inch beveled edge Lake Country Pad in white foam for multiple passes to remove the surface damage and restore clarity.
The taillight had hazing and what looked like rotary trails.
Light polishing for several applications improved the surface considerably as evidenced by the “tightening” of the reflection of the halogen light’s reflection.
After polishing the lights, it was time to end the day by masking the Gallardo for the next several days’ surgery. 3M masking tape (2 rolls) was used to cover all areas that could be damaged by incidental contact with a high speed polisher.
Day one started on 8:20 AM and finished just shy of 9:00 P.M. Counting Brian’s 4 hour contribution meant that slightly under 17 hours of time had been dedicated to the first day.
Day Two. Day Three.
Paint Defect Removal. Paint Re-Leveling. Paint Jeweling.
Day two started at slightly after 8:30 AM and ran until 8:30 PM. Using 500W halogen lamps and handheld L.E.D. lights the paint was inspected for all defects that could rob the gorgeous color of its natural shine. Given the pearl accent and metal flake, the defects where hard to see and harder to photograph.
The paint on this particular Lamborghini was EXTREMELY hard, much harder then modern Corvettes and Audis.
Process- larger flat panels.
The larger panels (which allowed me to use full sized pads) received a four step process.
First Meguiars' M105 Ultra Cut Compound was applied with on a
Meguiars' So1o Full Cut Wool Pad for 3-5 applications to remove random scratches and surface marring from the paint.
This was followed with
Menzerna PO83 on a Meguiars'
So1o Medium Cut Wool pad for one pass to begin refining and nursing the shine back into the paint.
Menzerna PO83 was once again applied, this time with a fine cut
Lake Country Green Euro foam pad and worked long to remove any marring from the wool pads and increase the gloss dramatically. This left the paint 100% defect free and it looked amazing.
Final gloss enhancement came from
Menzera PO85rd applied with a
Meguiars’ So1o Finishing Pad. 5 to 6 slows passes where made at 1500 rpm, before reducing the rpm and lighting jeweling the paint for several minutes until I was happy with the gloss.
The numerous tight areas designed into the Lamborghini’s gorgeous body required that a lot of polishing was done with 4 inch spot pads. Here is the general process used with when these pad’s were used.
First a
Lake Country foamed wool pad was used at high RPM with
Meguiars' M105 UCC. 5-6 passes where required to remove light damage from the paint.
This was followed by
Menzerna PO83 on a clean
Lake Country foamed wool pad with slightly less RPM.
A
Lake Country White Polishing Pad with
Menzerna PO83 was used to perfect the finish.
Finally the paint was jeweled with
PO85rd and
red Lake Country foam at low RPM until the gloss was deep and the paint was perfect.
The numerous tight curves of the body required constanre-tapingng so the various angles could be attackeflatlyey for maximum results without edge burn from the pads.
The damage was difficult to photograph because of the color and pearl flake in the paint.
Rear fender before and after picture combination.
Driver’s side before.
Driver’s side after.
Rear end of the Gallardo being polished with the purple wool pad.
Clarity restored!
Passenger side before.
And fully corrected and polished to La Bella Firma by Bella Macchina standard.
The front trunk had deep scratches running down the center, just above the clear-bra.
A better view.
Given the depth of the scratches and hardness of the top coat, I elected to wet-sand the damaged area with
Meguiars' 2500 uni-Grit paper.
After compounding, polishing, and jeweling…
After 12 hours the entire Lamborghini had been corrected yet still needed to be polished, leveled, then jeweled. I elected to call it a day and get an early start on day three. The third day was a rainy and dreary affair outside but inside the garage the Gallardo continued to be worked towards perfection.
The black painted trim around the windshield was heavily swirled and needed to be corrected before the paint could be finally polished and jeweled.
Using the same process as the rest of the paint left the trim perfect.
