Thanks. This is available locally. Is it necessary to clay bar first? If so how long of a process is it to clay a Ram?Superfine clay bar, polish, then wax or ceramic … For the price, I can’t say enough good things about the stuff below …. Check out the Youtube testing and reviews![]()
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Agreed! When I bought my new Ram a few weeks ago, my first order of business was glaze, wax, ten topped with a layer of this stuff. I'm not a believer in the expensive ceramics as none of them are going to protect as long as they claim. Spray ceramics provide a lot of shine and protection for a small fraction of the price. And the Turtle Wax spray is better than most.Superfine clay bar, polish, then wax or ceramic … For the price, I can’t say enough good things about the stuff below …. Check out the Youtube testing and reviews![]()
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It isn't typically necessary to clay a new vehicle depending on how far you've driven it. Clay gets rid of road and weather contaminants you can feel, but can't see. A great way to tell for sure is the plastic baggie test. Put your hand in a plastic baggie and feel various areas of the paint after a fresh wash. If you feel anything not smooth - it's time to clay.Thanks. This is available locally. Is it necessary to clay bar first? If so how long of a process is it to clay a Ram?
Thanks. This is available locally. Is it necessary to clay bar first? If so how long of a process is it to clay a Ram?
I agree with this. You will want to clay, regardless of what others say. After the vehicle is manufactured, it will sit outside a factory getting chemical fallout on the surface. It then gets shipped to a rail yard in prep of rail shipping. There are small metal particulates in the air near rail yards. Then the vehicle gets transported on the rails to the next shipping yard, where more fallout lands on the paint. Once at the dealer, they use cheap lot washers to keep cars "clean". The water is usually tap water and has many minerals in it that will dry itself to the paint.Yes you will want to do a quick clay bar before applying any product.
I personally like the avalon king products. And then just use a ceramic spray as a quick detailer, since thats primarily what it is.
Or contact your local detailing shop, a lot of them apply the products now, thats usually the best bet, since the truck needs to stay indoors for a few days while it cures.
Thanks, but my truck is staying nowhere other than my garage overnight let alone a few days. At least if I can help it. I will have to do the detailing myself or get a friend to help as I have bad shoulders. That is the reason I asked how difficult to clay a Ram. It may have some contaminates in the paint but it was only nine or ten days from window sticker to my home! I drove it 80 miles on country roads for break in. Been in my garage since then. Maybe wash it, air dry and put it back up until a friend can come over to help.Yes you will want to do a quick clay bar before applying any product.
I personally like the avalon king products. And then just use a ceramic spray as a quick detailer, since thats primarily what it is.
Or contact your local detailing shop, a lot of them apply the products now, thats usually the best bet, since the truck needs to stay indoors for a few days while it cures.
Great idea! Just be careful about driving it after claying if you don't have time to put anything on afterwards. At that point, your paint is as bare as it gets so any time you drive it you're just throwing more stuff back on it. Claying only takes about an hour even for a big truck like ours. It's a pretty fast process and very effective.You have encouraged me to try the clay kit. Not a big deal if I have to break it up into sessions. Your truck and Indian look great. Thanks.
use a decon spray from gtechniq and the claying will go by really easily.