Jimmy Mac 1999 SC300
#136
Lexus Test Driver
Car looks great. And your old white one is looking fantastic as well with that black accent on the bumper.
Are you keeping the 95-96 blacked out tails or putting on the 97+ ones?
Also, I see your wheels are for sale. What new wheels did you end up going with?
Are you keeping the 95-96 blacked out tails or putting on the 97+ ones?
Also, I see your wheels are for sale. What new wheels did you end up going with?
#140
Moderator
Came out looking really nice, Jimmy. Today was a great day to be outside. It hit 77 at O'Hare today..
#141
Lexus Test Driver
Also, I'd consider putting on non-blacked out tails on your car. I think the 97+ ones would look great and the chrome trim would really pop with the color.
#142
Yes, that's what I was referring to. I remember you mentioning that on your last thread about the black SC that you sold.
Also, I'd consider putting on non-blacked out tails on your car. I think the 97+ ones would look great and the chrome trim would really pop with the color.
Also, I'd consider putting on non-blacked out tails on your car. I think the 97+ ones would look great and the chrome trim would really pop with the color.
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bens sc (09-21-17)
#143
Lexus Fanatic
iTrader: (17)
Don't get me wrong, I like new stuff too, but that's a waste of money. The only argument I can make for brand new taillights is if the reverse sections were not yellowed and pure white. But every new set of lights I've seen pictures of also looked yellow to me.
I may be wrong because I have not seen new lights in person, but on pics they all look yellow, used or new. I can correct any set of lights to look absolutely brand new to have not a single scratch, swirl mark, hologram, nothing. Good enough for me. A little yellow aint never hurt nobody.
The following users liked this post:
myLEXsc400 (03-24-17)
#146
Lexus Fanatic
iTrader: (17)
Jimmy, I would not worry about having crystal clear lenses one bit. We correct taillights on every single car that we work on. They usually swirl up and scratch VERY easily as no car company uses a hard protective coating on the lenses like they do on the front lights. So every car needs them to be polished, sometimes sanded then polished if they are scuffed or have deep scratches. It's a very simple and straight forward process if you know how to do it. Most brand new cars, after one dealer wash already have taillights that are completely swirled haha.
Obviously the yellow discolored reverse light sections inside the housing cannot be corrected, unless there's some way to take the lights apart and bleach those white sections in some solution (no knowledge how that would be done).
Typical before/after shot of our work on an E36 we did a few years back. Tailights comes out with the same results:
Before picture. Spot on the vehicle was "buffed" previously by another detailer, notice a bunch of haze and holograms everywhere very typical after a bodyshop/dealership/cheap detail shops puts a buffer on the paint:
After (test spot):
Another test spot on a jet black (Obsidian) IS350 that was in for a light one-stage polish (not paint correction):
Obviously the yellow discolored reverse light sections inside the housing cannot be corrected, unless there's some way to take the lights apart and bleach those white sections in some solution (no knowledge how that would be done).
Typical before/after shot of our work on an E36 we did a few years back. Tailights comes out with the same results:
Before picture. Spot on the vehicle was "buffed" previously by another detailer, notice a bunch of haze and holograms everywhere very typical after a bodyshop/dealership/cheap detail shops puts a buffer on the paint:
After (test spot):
Another test spot on a jet black (Obsidian) IS350 that was in for a light one-stage polish (not paint correction):
#147
Lexus Fanatic
iTrader: (17)
Those IS350 shots were a product demo using M205 mid-cut/finishing polish depending on what paint you use it on and with what pad/technique.
Notice in the after shot, Lexus black paint is so soft, M205 was too aggressive and still left DA haze. Although considerably better than the before half, it was not the correct product to use on Lexus paint. A finer polish was needed like 85rd for example.
Notice in the after shot, Lexus black paint is so soft, M205 was too aggressive and still left DA haze. Although considerably better than the before half, it was not the correct product to use on Lexus paint. A finer polish was needed like 85rd for example.
#150
Lexus Test Driver
IMO black and blue just never go well together.
You can also send out the taillights to Organized Garage (O.G.) Status in CA. They specialize in custom lighting and light restoration. The owner is here on the forums, and owns a nice clean VIP manual SC300
You can also send out the taillights to Organized Garage (O.G.) Status in CA. They specialize in custom lighting and light restoration. The owner is here on the forums, and owns a nice clean VIP manual SC300