248 Pictures - February 3-Day Car & Boat Detailing Class with Mike Phillips

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Here's the final results!

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Awesome work guy!
Especially considering how horrible this paint looked when the truck arrived!

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Mike
 
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Day 3 - Sunday Morning - Extreme Gelcoat Correction

Here's our training boat, this is an extremely neglected 24' Sea Hunt Center Console. This is in my opinion, the BEST type of boat for training purposes. First, the gelcoat is VISIBLY oxidized and filled with dock rash. This is DEEP oxidation. Not only can the human eyes see the accurate condition, but a hull in this neglected state can also be captured with both photos and video. This is just one reason I don't bring in oxidized WHITE gelcoat boats. It's too difficult for the students to easily see the before and after difference and it's a lot more difficult to capture before and after with photos and video.

Besides that, a boat with large hull sides makes for a more comfortable working experience since all the steps we're going to go over mean standing on your feet and working on a surface directly across from you. I've seen other boat classes use Flats boats and Bass boats and the students are all hunched over trying to train on a narrow hull side and it's simply no fun to train on these types of boats. So, if you're interested in learning the art of gelcoat transformation, get signed up for my next boat detailing class.

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Here you can see someone else has already performed a couple of Test Spots. Whatever they did, the results looked pretty good. I'm not sure why they didn't tackle this project? For our part, we'll have to fix the entire hull and make sure there's no ghosting left by these two sections, which simply means we will re-sand and buff these areas.

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After moving the boat inside, I took a couple more pictures using a Swirl Finder Light to show that not only is the gelcoat hull deeply oxidized, but the last person that buffed out this boat using NOTHING but a rotary polisher and thus left holograms throughout the entire finish.

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It's Go Time!
It's probably around 9:00am in the morning. Class started t 8:30am and it likely took about a half hour for me to demonstrate how to do a Gelcoat Test Spot to dial-in and prove our process and then turn the class loose with the first step - machine wet sanding using 8mm gear-driven orbital polishers.

I don't have a lot of pictures of this process but here's are the steps the class used to go from neglected to respected.

  1. Machine wet sand - 1000 grit Mirka Abralon
  2. Machine wet sand - 2000 grit Mirka Abralon
  3. Machine wet sanding - 3000 grit Mirka Abralon
  4. NSP 150 with wool pads on rotary polishers
  5. NSP 150 with foam cutting pads on FLEX 8mm gear-driven orbital polishes
  6. Install 3 applications of the Dr. Beasley's Boat Coat Pro

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Here's the after results!
It was raining outside and the 1961 Plymouth Fury Police Car won't be leaving for a couple of days, so we squeezed her in off to the side of the boat to keep her clean and shiny.

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Awesome work class - this is a MIRROR FINISH on gelcoat!

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Same Mirror Finish on the Starboard side!

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Self-Portrait

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And here's the tired, but trained class that detailed 6 cars and this 24' Sea Hunt Center Console boat of the course of 3 days!

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And a huge thank you to Yancy for all his amazing photography work as well as assisting me with the training for this class.

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Mike
 
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Upcoming Boat Classes

Moving forward, the car detailing classes will be separate from the boat detailing classes. After teaching these 3-day classes for 5 years now, I'm simply catering to customer wishes. Some people just want the 2-day car detailing class, and some people just want the boat class.


2-Day Boat Class - Saturday March 15th and Sunday March 16th
For the year 2025, the Extreme Boat Detailing Class will be 2-days.

Day 1: Exterior Boat Detailing - everything you see in the pictures above.

Day 2: Interior Boat Detailing - this includes washing the inside, cleaning non-skid, (my personal technique), metal polishing, plastic polishing, vinyl cleaning and protecting.


Since teaching formal boat detailing classes since the year 2013, that's 12 years now as I type, I've found that MOST people want to learn how to do the outside of the boat like you see in the pictures above. A smaller percentage of people want to learn interior boat detailing. For this reason, you can sign-up for the first day, the second day, or both days.

Click here to sign-up for the March 2025 Extreme Boat Detailing Class


And if you have any question, always feel free to shoot me an email, call me or send me a text.


Mike Phillips
mike@drbeasleys.com
760-515-0444
 
Mike--that brush the class used on the rotary to scrub the tires; was that a hook & loop brush, or screw on? Can you share what it is?

I was just scrubbing and coating some tires, off-car, a few weeks ago, and doing it by hand. I completely forgot about your machine scrubbing method, I have some brushes that screw on my PC, somewhere. I think I have seen you doing it with a PC and a drill before, not rotary.
 
Mike--that brush the class used on the rotary to scrub the tires; was that a hook & loop brush, or screw on? Can you share what it is?

It's sold as a 5" Rotary Brush. There's velcro LOOP on the back side and it attaches to any 5" rotary backing plate.

SM Arnold 83-024 Rotary Carpet Brush, 1 Pack

Here's a recent video on this topic.





I was just scrubbing and coating some tires, off-car, a few weeks ago, and doing it by hand. I completely forgot about your machine scrubbing method, I have some brushes that screw on my PC, somewhere. I think I have seen you doing it with a PC and a drill before, not rotary.

You are correct. I made this short, crappy video back on October 25th, 2013, when cleaning the 40" tall tires on my 1987 Chevy Silverado.


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The rotary, being a gear-driven tool, works best for machine scrubbing tires. Back 12 years ago when I shared using a Cyclo Brush on a Porter Cable, either this 5" rotary brush wasn't invented yet or I didn't know about it yet.

I show machine scrubbing tires to get them clean, (have a fresh video and article coming up), and I also show machine applying dressings. The key is to clean the brush after cleaning and more important, clean the brush after using with a dressing.



From the September 3-day class

Machine Scrubbing White Lettering
The tires were dingy looking, and the white letters were stained with old tire dressing. To bring the look of the tires and the wheels up to spec to match the rest of the car, we machine scrubbed the tires and hand cleaned the wire wheels as we didn't wash this car but use Dr. Beasley's Prep Wash to do a waterless wash.

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587 Pictures - No Chairs! No Sitting! September 2024 Detailing Class with Mike Phillips


Mike
 
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