Neil - Like I said, it looked *identical* in single stage and bc/cc. It wasn't 'shinier & deeper, & obvious', like you might think. One of the reasons that I didn't have him buff it was because I didn't want Corvette gloss on my 58 Ply. Ron ----- Original Message ----- From: "eastern sierra Adj Services" <esierraadj@xxxxxxxxx> To: "Ron Waters" <ronbo97@xxxxxxxxxxx>; <L-FORWARDLOOK@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> Sent: Tuesday, March 30, 2004 11:43 PM Subject: Mental Problems > Thanx, Ron, but does your car (whatshis name?) LOOK like he/she has a > clear coat? I can "clearly (ahem)" see applying a c-coat to a light-ish > color, to produce some depth, but H's enamel paint has been > polished-out, in the past 15 years, til the pigment's almost gone. I've > been applying Turtle Wax's "dye-polish" for the past couple years--not > bad stuff, really, but you gotta use PLASTIC GLOVES, when you apply it! > > I'm a claims adjuster (not a chiropractor), & I look-at clear coats, > clinically, of varying quality, every day--similarly, I appreciate the > look of real New-Old-Stock (matte-finish) , instead of "Show Quality", > chrome-work. I also like to see well maintained 4-dr sedans, and > stationwagons, rather than Letter cars, and high-dollar NON-driven > "queens". > > You're right, tho; clear-coat DON'T look like straight-paint--it's > shinier & deeper, & obvious, --in most instances--it's ALSO what I see > on auction-cars, so, I guess that I just have > "mental-problems" with the perception of clear-coatings, (and > color-changes) on old cars. > > Neil >
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