Nothing is safe or sacred. At least, not when it comes to your car’s paint and the environment around it. Birds tend to use your hood as a target and rail dust can make any new car rust prematurely. From acid rain to tree sap and road tar, you could spend an hour or more every day, detailing the crud off your paint. Wax helps, but it’s not perfect either.
There’s no denying that a ceramic coating or graphene coating would protect your car’s paint better than any wax can do. If you’ve been scared off by the exorbitant price of having a professional detailer do the job, or if you love the feeling of a job well done, why not do it yourself? Knowing how to apply a ceramic coating to your car contains more than one life skill that a proud car owner should have in their toolbox anyway.
If it’s your first time applying a ceramic coating, it’s going to be intimidating, but it doesn’t have to be. Let’s go step by step through the process to apply a nano ceramic coating that looks great and protects your finish for years.
Quality products make all the difference in the finished results. Here’s what you’ll need from Ethos Car Care to get the job done.
The toughest part – and most time-consuming part – of applying ceramic coating isn’t the application itself but the prep. A perfectly clean, unmarked paint job is required or you’ll see every bit of dirt and every scratch preserved under the invisible coating.
If you’re applying ceramic coat to a new car, you might be thinking about skipping the prep stage. DON’T!! Even on new cars, there are bits of stuck-on dirt, rail dust, glue, and other junk. You’ll kick yourself.
Clean the exterior
Naturally, you’re starting with a washed car, but there’s soap residue and other stuff still on the paint. Begin by spraying each panel with Defy, then wiping it off with a clean microfiber cloth for a streak-free finish.
Run your hand over the paint. Feel those tiny bumps? That’s gunk still stuck to the paint, and a proper application requires those go too. A clay bar or a clay mitt will do miracles. Lay down a healthy mist of Pro Shine Ceramic Detail Spray, working in small areas, to act as a lubricant or you could mar the paint. Wipe the clay bar or mitt over the section to lift away the stuck-on bits. Repeat until you’ve done the whole car.
A light polish with a finishing compound may be all you need if you’re working on a new, never-been-driven car. For used cars that have had some life experience, a thorough cut and polish will be needed to remove the swirl marks and scratches. Follow the instructions on the power polisher and products you choose.
Get rid of any hidden moisture in panel gaps that could mess up your ceramic coating. Then, perform a final clean with Ethos Detox prep spray that strips any last contaminants, wiping it completely off with a clean microfiber cloth.
Your car should be ready to apply ceramic coating now.
The time-consuming part is done, and it’s time to lay down a glassy layer of ceramic coating. This process requires precision, and it’s best to apply it in a climate-controlled space between 65 and 75 degrees.
Shake the bottle well, then apply just a few drops of Ethos Ceramic Matrix to your applicator. Wipe it onto a smaller area, say 3’ x 3’, in straight lines that slightly overlap. You’ll feel it applying properly if the applicator glides smoothly. If it’s dragging, use a few more drops.
Right away, you’ll begin to see the “rainbow effect” as the coating bonds to the paint and begins to dry. It’ll turn hazy after between one and three minutes, with high-temp or high-humidity areas on the shorter end of the range. This is known as the flash time.
Wipe the area you’ve just applied in a circular pattern with little to no pressure, taking all the residue off the paint. Check your work with a work light or flashlight before moving on.
Repeat this process until the rest of your vehicle has been coated once. You could stop here, at one coat and you’d be admiring your mirror-like finish for a long time. But if you’re serious about trying to keep your car clean, have water droplets slip right off, and prevent sight scratches even better, then a second coating should be something you consider.
It might look and feel like the ceramic coating is dry, but it hasn’t fully cured yet. In fact, you should protect it from getting wet for at least 48 hours after you wrap up the job. After two days, it’s safe to drive it and get it wet, but the ceramic coating will continue to harden for seven days or so.
Although your car’s porous paint finish has been smoothed at the microscopic level and water and dirt don’t adhere like they used to, it’s going to get dirty again. Bird will continue to poop. Trees will continue to drip sap. The sun will keep beating down on it. Like oil changes for the engine, maintenance for your ceramic coating will keep it looking its best.
Washing your car with shampoo helps maintain the hydrophobic action that forces water to bead off, and ceramic resins fill in the surface. If your car just needs a spot clean or a touch-up, waterless wash can be used safely to whisk away grease, dust, dirt and other junk.