Polishing every 6 months to remove road film/black stains on white car

mickeymoss

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Hi Mike,

I’m a weekend warrior and an enthusiast, not a professional by any means. I drive a white Toyota SUV that’s parked outside 24/7, ungaraged, and exposed to the elements. Living in a tropical country with a rainy season that lasts half the year, I constantly battle black stains and road film that simple washing just can’t remove. It’s been driving me nuts!

I used to believe multi-year ceramic coatings were the ultimate solution, but after reading your articles, my perspective has completely shifted. You've opened my eyes to a whole new approach. Now, my mantra is: polish every six months and apply protection (skip the multi-year ceramic coatings) All thanks to your insights.

I recently read some of your articles, including:

Now I’m trying to decide which route makes more sense for my situation. Here are the two options I’m considering:

Im going to wash, mechanical decon, chemical decon and then polish.

Option 1:
Use an AIO (All-in-One) product or cleaner/wax like Turtle Wax Hybrid Ceramic Polish & Wax or 3D Speed. Then, top it off with a Turtle Wax ceramic spray sealant every month or two. Repeat this process every 6 months. This is an easier approach as it's just one and done. but less protection compared to the 2nd option.

Option 2:
Use a dedicated fine-cut polish like Meguiar’s Ultimate Polish or Menzerna SF 3500 for one step paint enhancement, followed by an IPA wipe-down and application of CanCoat Evo. Repeat this process every six months.

From what I understand, Option 2 is more time-consuming due to the added steps, but it offers better protection and hydrophobic properties since CanCoat Evo is a true coating. Is that correct? Or the better protection wouldnt matter as much because with Option 1 I'm constantly topping off the protection with the ceramic spray sealant anyway.

Given that I’m not a professional detailer and time isn’t a major concern for me, I don’t mind putting in the extra effort. My main goal is to remove those stubborn black stains and make the white paint pop again. I’m not chasing perfection or trying to correct every scratch, just want the car to look clean and fresh.

Would love to hear your thoughts on which route suits my situation best.

Also, apologies if my English isn’t perfect, it’s not my first language.
 

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Also, apologies if my English isn’t perfect, it’s not my first language.
No, it was perfect. If you hadn't ended with the above I would have simply assumed you were an American expat living in the Philippines.

I think either approach will work, I'll let Mike give you his opinion.
 
Out of the two options,

Option 2 will create a finish that will definitely last longer and make the car faster, safer and easier to wash and dry. Plus anytime you get a hard rain there will be a self-cleaning effect.

Option 1 is the faster option and while neither will create the same hydrophobic surface a dedicated ceramic coating will, if you're doing this twice a year you car will always look amazing.

Both are great options because as Barry Meguiar says,

Frequent car care is easy car care -Barry Meguiar


Mike
 
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