Volvo Community Forum. The Forums of the Volvo Owners Club

Forum Rules Volvo Owners Club About VOC Volvo Gallery Links Volvo History Volvo Press
Go Back   Volvo Owners Club Forum > "General Topics" > General Volvo and Motoring Discussions

Notices

General Volvo and Motoring Discussions This forum is for messages of a general nature about Volvos that are not covered by other forums and other motoring related matters of interest. Users will need to register to post/reply.

Information
  • VOC Members: There is no login facility using your VOC membership number or the details from page 3 of the club magazine. You need to register in the normal way
  • AOL Customers: Make sure you check the 'Remember me' check box otherwise the AOL system may log you out during the session. This is a known issue with AOL.
  • AOL, Yahoo and Plus.net users. Forum owners such as us are finding that AOL, Yahoo and Plus.net are blocking a lot of email generated from forums. This may mean your registration activation and other emails will not get to you, or they may appear in your spam mailbox

Thread Informations

How to Remove Scratches from Bodywork

Views : 651

Replies : 7

Users Viewing This Thread :  

Reply
 
Thread Tools Display Modes
Old Mar 13th, 2018, 17:44   #1
SvenAgain
Old Member
 

Last Online: Jun 24th, 2023 17:54
Join Date: Jul 2017
Location: Stirling
Default How to Remove Scratches from Bodywork

Hi,

Just noticed some very fine scratches on the bodywork of my six months old Volvo. What would be the best way to deal with these?

If I polished them out would this remove the surface laquer protecting the paintwork?

Thanks,

Sven
SvenAgain is offline   Reply With Quote
Old Mar 13th, 2018, 19:02   #2
T5Sweep
Master Member
 

Last Online: Oct 24th, 2022 09:28
Join Date: Sep 2014
Location: Peterborough
Default

Polishing removes only microns at a time, it takes quite some effort to get through the lacquer.

Are they just light swirls?
T5Sweep is offline   Reply With Quote
Old Mar 13th, 2018, 19:03   #3
canis
Non Fragile
 
canis's Avatar
 

Last Online: Oct 13th, 2023 05:46
Join Date: Apr 2010
Location: Chadderton, Oldham
Default

The answer is, maybe. And yes, if you polish too hard and too deep, you can polish through the laquer. An experienced refinisher would be able to make a reasonable judgement as to the likelihood of success, but for someone who's never done it before, it'll be guesswork.

On the plus side, if you do burn the laquer or polish through it, the only solution is to have the panel repainted. Which is the only cure if the scratches are too deep anyway, so you've not really lost anything.

Or, you could just learn to live with the scratches instead. So the question is; Can you afford to have the panel repainted? If not, it might be best to leave it alone.
canis is offline   Reply With Quote
Old Mar 13th, 2018, 19:22   #4
GusGecko
from C30 to XC60
 
GusGecko's Avatar
 

Last Online: Aug 28th, 2023 07:55
Join Date: Jul 2012
Location: Braintree, Essex
Default

Swirl marks are generally caused by poor washing (of course there's many other ways too)

The only way to truly get rid of them is by machine polishing. (Easy to do if your prepared to buy a DA polisher, pads and products)

However you can certainly mask/reduce the effect through both retail products from somewhere like Halfords by hand and of course more specialist products.

Look for polishes and scratch remover products. Alternatively a glaze is a filler which will mask the damage for a period of time.

If you some any polishing or glazing, be sure to protect with a wax or sealant :-)
__________________
XC60 D5 SE LUX NAV with toys 'n' stuff

GusGecko is offline   Reply With Quote
Old Mar 13th, 2018, 20:09   #5
Dancake
Premier Member
 

Last Online: Yesterday 22:31
Join Date: Apr 2011
Location: Belfast
Default

Farecla G3 Advanced Liquid Compound will do the trick. It's similar to T-Cut, except it's less abrasive. When used correctly, it will bring the paintwork up like new. Ideally you need a DA machine with a selection of pads to apply it.
__________________
1996 850 T5 - Sold
2003 S40 1.9d - Sold
2004 S60 D5
Dancake is offline   Reply With Quote
The Following User Says Thank You to Dancake For This Useful Post:
Old Mar 13th, 2018, 21:45   #6
ITSv40
VOC Member
 

Last Online: Yesterday 22:30
Join Date: Mar 2008
Location: Northampton
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Dancake View Post
Farecla G3 Advanced Liquid Compound will do the trick. It's similar to T-Cut, except it's less abrasive. When used correctly, it will bring the paintwork up like new. Ideally you need a DA machine with a selection of pads to apply it.
Farecla G3 is the regular quite aggressive cutting compound that needs to be applied by machine. Farecla G10 is the fine compound used after G3 by machine or hand application.
__________________
2001 V40 2.0lt Sport lux - Daily Driver. 174k miles.
2003 C70 2.4 GT Convertible - Garage Queen. 65k miles.
http://www.neptuno6benagil.com
ITSv40 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old Mar 14th, 2018, 06:47   #7
green van man
Premier Member
 

Last Online: Apr 11th, 2024 09:21
Join Date: Nov 2012
Location: Ffos y Ffin
Default

This is the perennial problem with new cars. That first scratch breaks your heart.

Around our way overgrown hedges mean light scratching is inevitable. Hedges can only be cut between Oct and end of March, all that spring growth and a summer of scratches is garenteed just driving the back roads.
Coloured waxes can make them less obvious but getting them out is respray every year scenario.

Paul.
green van man is offline   Reply With Quote
Old Mar 14th, 2018, 10:00   #8
prc68
Member
 

Last Online: Feb 6th, 2020 15:38
Join Date: Oct 2017
Location: Sao Pedro de Moel
Default

As already mentioned polish is the way to go.
I would advise, that if your not really that experienced in polishing, to stay away though!!!
Polish yes, but not with a heavy polish, you will do more harm than good.
Look for a swirl mark polish with fillers, that fill in the scratches. This will obviously come out with washes, but it is much safer then a heavy polish and DA newbie.
I would probably go with something like Meguiars ScratchX or swirl remover polish
__________________
2017 S60 - D5 R-Design

Looking to upgrade the suspension
prc68 is offline   Reply With Quote
Reply


Currently Active Users Viewing This Thread: 1 (0 members and 1 guests)
 
Thread Tools
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off

Forum Jump


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 00:13.


Powered by vBulletin
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.